Anonymous wrote:For me it’s because I have two bad sleepers. On any given night I probably got 4-5 non-consecutive hours of sleep max, even with my husband taking half the over night wake ups. So I’m already exhausted by 9:30 and if I were to go out instead of going to bed I’d want to end myself the next day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me - if I’m already away from my kids for work, it’s hard to take even more time away otherwise.
I get that -- but once every few weeks?
I’m not sure how old your friends’ kids are. Of course it got easier as my kids got older. This is the infant & toddlers board, and yes, it was hard for me then. If they work and then are gone 6-10 they’re giving up most of their time with their child that day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some friends are worth evening visits. Some aren’t. Some plans are worth, it, some aren’t. I am an introvert who prefers being home in the evenings and going to bed early. It has nothing to do with my husband’s parenting skills or me not being able to be away with my kids.
I have a very social group at work, and we have long lunches and one-drink-at-4 bar trips and that’s enough for me. But I will make plans with friends in the evenings on occasion. I go on girls trips sometimes. But I like early bedtimes, TBH.
"Worth" evening visits? Oh, yeeesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just don’t want to for whatever reason. Why do you need those hours vs the daytime hours offered?
Because daytime hours are work hours for most people.
Anonymous wrote:Curious OP do you have an infant/toddler at home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This may be an unpopular post. I am not trying to be incendiary. But this has been burning my curiosity for a while, so here we go -- I truly want to understand.
I have a couple of friends who cannot seem to go out at night. They want to get together and text often and try to make plans during the day if they're working at home and kids are at daycare. But they cannot get out at night because it means leaving their kids home with their husband during dinner and bath.
I am genuinely curious: Why can't you leave your kids at home? Can't your spouse feed them and bathe them? What happens between the hours of 6-10 that is sacred? Why won't you give yourself a break? It is straining a few friendships with women who seem tethered to a routine that stifles them. Why?
Maybe they don’t consider going out with you in the evening “a break”. Maybe they don’t consider their routines to be “stifling “. I’m genuinely curious: Why, if you have friends who can make plans during the day, you’re so insistent on having them make plans in the evening? 6-10 is often the only time that the entire family can spend time together awake. For some that is pretty precious— and a priority over spending time with friends who could be flexible but apparently choose not to.
Have you ever offered to do kid-friendly activities? If not, then maybe ask yourself why you’re comfortable straining friendships — insisting that your friends with family responsibilities conform to the demands and schedules of the friends who lack such responsibilities.