Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH is always sitting there on his phone. He says he has to sit in a chair for his back instead of playing on the fooor, ok. But he often just sits there staring at his phone and I hear DS trying to talk to him and is ignored. DH says he is looking up house or work problems, and also says he isn’t on his phone all night, which is somewhat true- he plugs his phone in after DS’s bedtime and is off his phone for several hours in the late evening.
So without nagging, what do I do? I hate to think he and DS are missing out on quality time. DH has quality time with him but mostly when they leave the house to go shopping or to the pool. At the playground or at home, he just lets DS play (often while trying to engage his dad) while he stares at the phone.
You don't do anything. It's not your job to manage their interactions.
Anonymous wrote:The child will make their feelings about the phone clear soon enough. Around 2 my son learned to say “no no phone. Put it down” and he also would steal my husband or my mom’s phones and throw them in the trash.
Anonymous wrote:I sometimes sit in the playroom and just read a book while the kids play around me. Does that make me terrible?
Anonymous wrote:The child will make their feelings about the phone clear soon enough. Around 2 my son learned to say “no no phone. Put it down” and he also would steal my husband or my mom’s phones and throw them in the trash.
Anonymous wrote:We made a family rule of no phones unless absolutely necessary (work call or critical email) or to call family members once everyone is home for the day. I was getting sick of my own phone use too, so I framed it as "we need to commit to this together because it's just not necessary to always be staring at devices." There are a ton of articles out there about how great it is to free yourself of your phone, you could say something like "I keep reading these articles about unplugging and I'd really like to try it myself bc I'm worried I'm missing out on other things, would you do it with me so we can hold each other accountable?" That way it's a joint commitment rather than a critique of just his behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Have you asked him to put the phone away?
Anonymous wrote:My DH is like this. I don’t do anything. It’s his life, he’s apparently living it how he wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He shouldn't be on his phone when he's supposed to be spending time with his child. You shouldn't have to tell him that. Also, make it a house rule.
Really? That how things work in your house? One parent unilaterally makes a rule, and the other . . . just follows it?
NP here. This is one of those common sense things. The reference to making it a "house rule" sounds more like a formality to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He shouldn't be on his phone when he's supposed to be spending time with his child. You shouldn't have to tell him that. Also, make it a house rule.
Really? That how things work in your house? One parent unilaterally makes a rule, and the other . . . just follows it?