Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
+1
Yeah. Not everyone should be a parent. Not everyone is a good mom or dad.
Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Right - seems like he must have had these traits before she met him. And, yes, OP, you can leave him and require supervised visits or classes so that his behavior improves. Your explanation - he is sarcastic, laughs at your daughter, etc. - but you can't leave him because YOU love him is actually selfish.
Totally. And sacrificing your baby to an abusive parent because "Him being an a-hole makes me laugh! 😍" is selfish and frankly stupid as well. It's bad parenting, period. And it's done out of selfish laziness, which is really kind of sickening.
Anyway, I doubt I can talk any sense into you, so what's the point? You'll just do what benefits YOU, not your kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Right - seems like he must have had these traits before she met him. And, yes, OP, you can leave him and require supervised visits or classes so that his behavior improves. Your explanation - he is sarcastic, laughs at your daughter, etc. - but you can't leave him because YOU love him is actually selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Right - seems like he must have had these traits before she met him. And, yes, OP, you can leave him and require supervised visits or classes so that his behavior improves. Your explanation - he is sarcastic, laughs at your daughter, etc. - but you can't leave him because YOU love him is actually selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Right - seems like he must have had these traits before she met him. And, yes, OP, you can leave him and require supervised visits or classes so that his behavior improves. Your explanation - he is sarcastic, laughs at your daughter, etc. - but you can't leave him because YOU love him is actually selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Awww I feel really bad for your daughter that you made such a poor life/parenting decision to be with what sounds like a garden variety douche. Your daughter deserved way better than the two of you. That's all. I wish her good luck
Anonymous wrote:OP again. Yesterday I had her for most of the day and she was great with me. He takes them for 5 minutes while I go to the bathroom and I hear her screaming for me. He texts me "Help!" Apparently she just walked over to the baby and hit her. There is more to that story that he isn't telling me. I'm sick of it.
Anonymous wrote:I get it. My husband can be an ass about some things too, and has to stumble into the information on his own before he believes it (for example, he wasn't sure about the puffer jackets in car seats, until he saw a product on Shark Tank.) My husband respects me though, and when I express how his tone or attitude is being disruptive, he may be slightly insulted, but he'll work with me until we're on the same page. He needs to grow up and understand his role as a parent is to teach and guide your child, not to mock them. I'm extremely sarcastic too, but I understand that my 2 year old doesn't understand the nuances, and needs me to set an example. It shouldn't be his intention to raise an asshole.