Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the main issue is that the 3 year old and OP are up and ready to start the day at 7 am while the DH is probably still sleeping and wants the first "out of the house" activity to be lunch. Most 3 year olds need to burn energy off in the morning.
Sure. But then, if OP wants to do her activity w/ DS alone, why can't she do that in the morning? Plan one that isn't an hour away and where DS doesn't have to leave "early" to meet DH for brunch; then have DH take him to the playground/for a walk while she does whatever (joins if she wants to; gets alone time if she doesn't). Alternatively, have DH do the playground in the morning (perhaps every other week if sleeping in is the real issue) and then meet OP for family lunch and then OP can do an afternoon outing w/ the kid.
FWIW parent-kid time and family time can both work. We have 3 young kids and, when DH isn't working, we typically split the kids for age appropriate activities in the morning and then do a family thing in the afternoon/evening; in the summer, when we have fewer activities, we typically do family outings, often to the pool. Our best friends also have 3 and they split the mornings so that one parent takes all 3 kids to activities (youngest often just hangs around) each morning so the other can sleep in or work and then they usually swap in the afternoons & do family evenings... Sometimes they all socialize as a family in the afternoon + evening w/ friends, etc. Less family time than is our style, but works for them. (And their marriage is strong, they do more date nights/alone time than we do; it's just a preference/work management thing.)
I don’t get the feeling that the OP just “has” her husband do something for hours on every Saturday afternoon just because she told him to.
She could probably do something closer by on the morning, then meet her DH for lunch if/when he felt like it. But I understand why she wouldn’t want to do that every weekend.
Anonymous wrote:A 3 year old is telling you he prefers only going out with you and not with his dad? Either you’re baiting your toddler with loaded questions or you’re making this up. Either way, it’s not a good look for you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the main issue is that the 3 year old and OP are up and ready to start the day at 7 am while the DH is probably still sleeping and wants the first "out of the house" activity to be lunch. Most 3 year olds need to burn energy off in the morning.
Sure. But then, if OP wants to do her activity w/ DS alone, why can't she do that in the morning? Plan one that isn't an hour away and where DS doesn't have to leave "early" to meet DH for brunch; then have DH take him to the playground/for a walk while she does whatever (joins if she wants to; gets alone time if she doesn't). Alternatively, have DH do the playground in the morning (perhaps every other week if sleeping in is the real issue) and then meet OP for family lunch and then OP can do an afternoon outing w/ the kid.
FWIW parent-kid time and family time can both work. We have 3 young kids and, when DH isn't working, we typically split the kids for age appropriate activities in the morning and then do a family thing in the afternoon/evening; in the summer, when we have fewer activities, we typically do family outings, often to the pool. Our best friends also have 3 and they split the mornings so that one parent takes all 3 kids to activities (youngest often just hangs around) each morning so the other can sleep in or work and then they usually swap in the afternoons & do family evenings... Sometimes they all socialize as a family in the afternoon + evening w/ friends, etc. Less family time than is our style, but works for them. (And their marriage is strong, they do more date nights/alone time than we do; it's just a preference/work management thing.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You've definitely posted similar questions before; you have a writing style that's very distinctive. I think your husband didn't play with or interact with your child to your liking. It sounds more like a relationship question for therapy than a parenting issue.
Is this the mom whose husband coaches soccer?
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A 3 year old is telling you he prefers only going out with you and not with his dad? Either you’re baiting your toddler with loaded questions or you’re making this up. Either way, it’s not a good look for you, OP.
Agree. You are making your father-son relationship really unhealthy. There is nothing wrong with going to the playground, you are making things way complicated than they should be, a 3 year old doesn't NEED to do some special activity each and every single weekend that is one hour away. What your son needs is spending time with his parents, both of them.
Anonymous wrote:A 3 year old is telling you he prefers only going out with you and not with his dad? Either you’re baiting your toddler with loaded questions or you’re making this up. Either way, it’s not a good look for you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:You've definitely posted similar questions before; you have a writing style that's very distinctive. I think your husband didn't play with or interact with your child to your liking. It sounds more like a relationship question for therapy than a parenting issue.
Anonymous wrote:Just reading that was exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:I think the main issue is that the 3 year old and OP are up and ready to start the day at 7 am while the DH is probably still sleeping and wants the first "out of the house" activity to be lunch. Most 3 year olds need to burn energy off in the morning.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. DS wakes me up around 7am, and I am dying at home playing/stuck with him till lunch hour if we do DH's preferred activities. DS is high energy, and it is a lot easier if we both get out of house to breath & do something. DS is attached to me, and it is always I play with him or he play around me, and both of us goes from one activities to next activities (each lasts 5-30 min) at the house. DH does free-style parenting at home which he rarely plays with DS. That is how DH was raised growing up. It is always me taking care of DS at home, and DH does not want to help at all. He says that DS can play by himself for hours, but the problem is I am the one ends up playing with him for hours.
Of course we can alternative activities, and we did it sometimes. But on the day of his preferred activities, it always end up to the point that I am too exhausting to entertain or both of us gets bored at home. DS goes to full time daycare 5 days a week, and he is always looking forward to start his day & having fun early on weekend.
Yeah, I agree that we need to work on compromising. And, I need to work on my temper as well because I admit that I nag too much. That is why I say that it is a vent post.