Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t you sleep in a hotel room? I would have no sympathy if my husband got a quiet room to himself with zero interruption and “couldn’t sleep”
There isn’t any reason you shouldn’t come back rested. Next time take an ambien or a Xanax
Female here, and I don't sleep well in hotel rooms either. Zero interruption is a fantasy - have you never stayed in a hotel? People have parties in hotels, there are kids, there are people who have loud sex or sound like they are stomping around. On top of that, the surroundings aren't familiar; it isn't your bed, your pillows, your environment, etc, so relaxation is already hard. To say that flights are not comfortable is an understatement, even if you are flying first class. Many people on travel party for sure, but I would say even more people are working 12-14 hours a day.
That said, I agree that OP needs to take over child care after being gone. I think a better solution, however, if they could afford it, is to outsource some childcare for the days that he is traveling.
Anonymous wrote:Let your wife commute for three days between her nursing job and a hotel while you handle everything else. After those three days are up, you continue to handle all of the nighttime wakings for another three days so she can catch up on her sleep after being in the hotel.
Anonymous wrote:Why can’t you sleep in a hotel room? I would have no sympathy if my husband got a quiet room to himself with zero interruption and “couldn’t sleep”
There isn’t any reason you shouldn’t come back rested. Next time take an ambien or a Xanax
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Ok team wife it is. When I am wrong I am wrong. We both work full time. Wife works as a floor RN so her shifts vary and some weeks its "part time" (we always try to sync my travel with a light week) but the average amount of shifts per month always equals full time status.
Anonymous wrote:Why can’t you sleep in a hotel room? I would have no sympathy if my husband got a quiet room to himself with zero interruption and “couldn’t sleep”
There isn’t any reason you shouldn’t come back rested. Next time take an ambien or a Xanax
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Ok team wife it is. When I am wrong I am wrong. We both work full time. Wife works as a floor RN so her shifts vary and some weeks its "part time" (we always try to sync my travel with a light week) but the average amount of shifts per month always equals full time status.
