Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Reading through this I think our values and views on parenting must be so existentially opposed I wouldn’t even know where to begin with “advice”. My fundamentals are very different than yours.
Also I think you are being unfair. I hang out with the baby 7-8 am in the morning and 6-7 pm when he goes to bed. I then go back to work and work until 11 pm.
Ok. This has to be a troll. No one would be ok spending two hours a day with their child.
And no time with DH.
Indeed, no time with DH
I spend much more time on the weekend obviously.
The baby is 9 months old. He wakes up at 7 and goes to bed at 7.
If he went to daycare how much more time would parents who work less than me spend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your HHI and what would it be at 45 hours per week. If you are really working 65 hours per week that’s not going to work long term. You need a long term plan. Is your plan really work work work and then die? Life is meant to be lived a little. Your kid can go to your state school and still be a doctor or lawyer, k?
OP: we’re at 400 right now. We are both in our late 30s and until recently we were at 250. my husband also would want us to move to a bigger place (I don’t) and he likes taking nicer vacations than I do. He would not want to downshift.
I would be super resentful if my DH was that selfish and focused on money. My children come before a big house and expensive vacations. It sounds like both of you have fuked up priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Reading through this I think our values and views on parenting must be so existentially opposed I wouldn’t even know where to begin with “advice”. My fundamentals are very different than yours.
Also I think you are being unfair. I hang out with the baby 7-8 am in the morning and 6-7 pm when he goes to bed. I then go back to work and work until 11 pm.
Ok. This has to be a troll. No one would be ok spending two hours a day with their child.
And no time with DH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Reading through this I think our values and views on parenting must be so existentially opposed I wouldn’t even know where to begin with “advice”. My fundamentals are very different than yours.
Also I think you are being unfair. I hang out with the baby 7-8 am in the morning and 6-7 pm when he goes to bed. I then go back to work and work until 11 pm.
Ok. This has to be a troll. No one would be ok spending two hours a day with their child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Reading through this I think our values and views on parenting must be so existentially opposed I wouldn’t even know where to begin with “advice”. My fundamentals are very different than yours.
Also I think you are being unfair. I hang out with the baby 7-8 am in the morning and 6-7 pm when he goes to bed. I then go back to work and work until 11 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Reading through this I think our values and views on parenting must be so existentially opposed I wouldn’t even know where to begin with “advice”. My fundamentals are very different than yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your HHI and what would it be at 45 hours per week. If you are really working 65 hours per week that’s not going to work long term. You need a long term plan. Is your plan really work work work and then die? Life is meant to be lived a little. Your kid can go to your state school and still be a doctor or lawyer, k?
OP: we’re at 400 right now. We are both in our late 30s and until recently we were at 250. my husband also would want us to move to a bigger place (I don’t) and he likes taking nicer vacations than I do. He would not want to downshift.
Your HHI is 400k a year and you can't cut back, save for one child's college and your retirement? Sounds like you need to downsize on your mortgage or spending habits somewhere . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your HHI and what would it be at 45 hours per week. If you are really working 65 hours per week that’s not going to work long term. You need a long term plan. Is your plan really work work work and then die? Life is meant to be lived a little. Your kid can go to your state school and still be a doctor or lawyer, k?
OP: we’re at 400 right now. We are both in our late 30s and until recently we were at 250. my husband also would want us to move to a bigger place (I don’t) and he likes taking nicer vacations than I do. He would not want to downshift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your HHI and what would it be at 45 hours per week. If you are really working 65 hours per week that’s not going to work long term. You need a long term plan. Is your plan really work work work and then die? Life is meant to be lived a little. Your kid can go to your state school and still be a doctor or lawyer, k?
OP: we’re at 400 right now. We are both in our late 30s and until recently we were at 250. my husband also would want us to move to a bigger place (I don’t) and he likes taking nicer vacations than I do. He would not want to downshift.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: as I mention, I do spend time with the baby. I basically don't do anything else for me - no TV, no movies, no exercise, maybe 15 mins of internet browsing per day.