Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a sad state of affairs that we expect a couple to work 105 combined hours per week and have time to raise a kid. Work is the bigger problem here.
OP exactly my point. The myth of the career woman is oversold. You can definitely either make it super big or have a good but not amazing career and have a good marriage.but a really good career usually works out if it’s the man.
Misogyny goes both ways. If you were a man, people would be calling you out on this but since you're a woman and the vast majority of people on his board are women who have taken a second seat to their spouse, they'll agree with you.
I have your ideal husband, OP. I work more and make more money, we are equal partners in home-making and childcare. There are some areas that are my strengths and I can manage with my schedule (I'm the organized one - I am responsible for the financials, childcare things like finding and ensuring payment for camps, after care, classes, finding service people for things like broken heater), and others that are better for his strengths and his schedule (cooking, yardwork, kids drop off/pick up, homework help, etc.), and yet other things we both hate doing but split or hire out (cleaning is a big one, fixing things, etc.).
You can do two things - you can sit here and continue to complain yet do nothing, or you can try to make a change (if talking to him doesn't work, then couples therapy might).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a sad state of affairs that we expect a couple to work 105 combined hours per week and have time to raise a kid. Work is the bigger problem here.
OP exactly my point. The myth of the career woman is oversold. You can definitely either make it super big or have a good but not amazing career and have a good marriage.but a really good career usually works out if it’s the man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are all naive about those things, dear. It's baptism by fire. You don't know what you're in for until you're in it.
Yes but they both parents need to step up.
I think the rub here is OPs spouse agreed to be primary parent yet only wants to do daily execution stuff like feed child dinner and bedtime early.
Who checks the clothing sizes, car seats, age appropriate toys or classes or day care, or books, or dr appts, or family trips and social calendar, or schools, or the household stuff like food or paper products, vehicle oil changes, lawn or landscape maintenance, household repairs, etc.? The parent working with clients 60 hours a day or the 40-45 hour flex job parent who volunteered to be Primary Parent, or both and what’s the split?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are all naive about those things, dear. It's baptism by fire. You don't know what you're in for until you're in it.
Yes but they both parents need to step up.
I think the rub here is OPs spouse agreed to be primary parent yet only wants to do daily execution stuff like feed child dinner and bedtime early.
Who checks the clothing sizes, car seats, age appropriate toys or classes or day care, or books, or dr appts, or family trips and social calendar, or schools, or the household stuff like food or paper products, vehicle oil changes, lawn or landscape maintenance, household repairs, etc.? The parent working with clients 60 hours a day or the 40-45 hour flex job parent who volunteered to be Primary Parent, or both and what’s the split?
OP: thank you. You get it. I do ALL of that stuff. My husband says that because he does the direct childcare for 2.5 hours a day a few days a week (I do two evenings a week), he does not need to do anything like that. He also believes that these do not amount to childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you hiring the baby sitter? Can he just hire one himself?
Tho honestly I’d throw the video game system away. If he’s neglecting his kids because of it, it’s gotta go.
He plays every day!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither of you should be running yourselves ragged between 7:30pm and 10:30pm. You guys should align on the bare minimum to be fine before bed and make it equitable. For most, it might be put the leftover food away and run the dishwasher.
Then, you need to talk about a weekend schedule. No one gets twelve hours off from parenting during the weekend. But really, isn’t this kid napping 3-4 hours a day? That is a good time to relax. And then figure out a plan of who does what on the weekends.
But, I also get the sense that you want to both make your own baby food and work 60 hours a week — and that just isn’t ever going to work without you being pissed off all the time. You have to drop the rope on some things.
Op: the kid is almost 2 so he has 1 nap. I cook for the kid 3 times a week while watching the kid. It’s not that difficult TBH.
He does not want to reduce his kid free time over the weekend. He says he needs it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are all naive about those things, dear. It's baptism by fire. You don't know what you're in for until you're in it.
Yes but they both parents need to step up.
I think the rub here is OPs spouse agreed to be primary parent yet only wants to do daily execution stuff like feed child dinner and bedtime early.
Who checks the clothing sizes, car seats, age appropriate toys or classes or day care, or books, or dr appts, or family trips and social calendar, or schools, or the household stuff like food or paper products, vehicle oil changes, lawn or landscape maintenance, household repairs, etc.? The parent working with clients 60 hours a day or the 40-45 hour flex job parent who volunteered to be Primary Parent, or both and what’s the split?
OP: thank you. You get it. I do ALL of that stuff. My husband says that because he does the direct childcare for 2.5 hours a day a few days a week (I do two evenings a week), he does not need to do anything like that. He also believes that these do not amount to childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Neither of you should be running yourselves ragged between 7:30pm and 10:30pm. You guys should align on the bare minimum to be fine before bed and make it equitable. For most, it might be put the leftover food away and run the dishwasher.
Then, you need to talk about a weekend schedule. No one gets twelve hours off from parenting during the weekend. But really, isn’t this kid napping 3-4 hours a day? That is a good time to relax. And then figure out a plan of who does what on the weekends.
But, I also get the sense that you want to both make your own baby food and work 60 hours a week — and that just isn’t ever going to work without you being pissed off all the time. You have to drop the rope on some things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are all naive about those things, dear. It's baptism by fire. You don't know what you're in for until you're in it.
Yes but they both parents need to step up.
I think the rub here is OPs spouse agreed to be primary parent yet only wants to do daily execution stuff like feed child dinner and bedtime early.
Who checks the clothing sizes, car seats, age appropriate toys or classes or day care, or books, or dr appts, or family trips and social calendar, or schools, or the household stuff like food or paper products, vehicle oil changes, lawn or landscape maintenance, household repairs, etc.? The parent working with clients 60 hours a day or the 40-45 hour flex job parent who volunteered to be Primary Parent, or both and what’s the split?
Anonymous wrote:Neither of you should be running yourselves ragged between 7:30pm and 10:30pm. You guys should align on the bare minimum to be fine before bed and make it equitable. For most, it might be put the leftover food away and run the dishwasher.
Then, you need to talk about a weekend schedule. No one gets twelve hours off from parenting during the weekend. But really, isn’t this kid napping 3-4 hours a day? That is a good time to relax. And then figure out a plan of who does what on the weekends.
But, I also get the sense that you want to both make your own baby food and work 60 hours a week — and that just isn’t ever going to work without you being pissed off all the time. You have to drop the rope on some things.
Anonymous wrote:My husband really wanted kids. He assured me would be the primarily caregiver.
I am very focused on my career and wrk long hours.
He assured me that he would be happy to be the primary caregiver
Now this has called a lot of resentment.
He does do drop off and pick up in 75% of cases.
But he does none of the cooking, admin, finding daycare, applying for passport, etc.
He thinks I should do that because I do less of the direct care.
If I need to work on the weekend, I have to hire a babysitter so that he can play video games. He can’t handle more than 3 hours taking care of a toddler.
I work 60 hours a week and he works 45 hours a week.
I have no free time.
He has plenty.
Love the baby and I like my career.
Our marriage is strained because we fight about childcare and tasks all the time.
I thought that it’s possible for a guy to be the main caretaker.
Was naive.
Marriages work much better when they follow traditional gender roles, except for a few circumstances. But that’s the exception not the rule.
Unfortunately I make more than he does so I cannot step back.
I am exhausted and resentful of him.
Anonymous wrote:We are all naive about those things, dear. It's baptism by fire. You don't know what you're in for until you're in it.