Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
OP here again. My daughter has a track and field meet today and had to be on site by 8 a.m.
Plus, my husband didn't know exactly where the friend lives and couldn't be expected to figure out a convenient meeting spot while driving.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I would suggest therapy. You can’t control everything and everyone only yourself.
Who cares if your 13 year old goes to bed 30-60 minutes late?
The other option was to tell this other family, that no you couldn’t carpool because your daughter had an early start the next day. It is ok to say no! I have a family who consistently used me for carpool even if it was inconvenient for me so I started saying “I can only drop them off I can’t pick up as we have another engagement right after” (and we did).
Get divorced. Who cares about the money. You all will be so much happier.
You can’t change your husband. You can only control yourself your emotions, your actions, and only change yourself.
Don’t do this to your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I would suggest therapy. You can’t control everything and everyone only yourself.
Who cares if your 13 year old goes to bed 30-60 minutes late?
The other option was to tell this other family, that no you couldn’t carpool because your daughter had an early start the next day. It is ok to say no! I have a family who consistently used me for carpool even if it was inconvenient for me so I started saying “I can only drop them off I can’t pick up as we have another engagement right after” (and we did).
Get divorced. Who cares about the money. You all will be so much happier.
You can’t change your husband. You can only control yourself your emotions, your actions, and only change yourself.
Don’t do this to your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
OP here again. My daughter has a track and field meet today and had to be on site by 8 a.m.
Plus, my husband didn't know exactly where the friend lives and couldn't be expected to figure out a convenient meeting spot while driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That doesn’t seem that toxic or out of line - driving an extra 30 mins doesn’t seem crazy. What is crazy is picking a fight about it.
Maybe it’s you who’ve changed?
OP here. Knowing that the friend's parents wanted to meet at a mutually convenient spot, I called to literally suggest one ( knowing also that he wouldn'tbeabletocome up with it himself). It was my husband who cut me off in an unnecessarily rude and dismissive manner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
OP here again. My daughter has a track and field meet today and had to be on site by 8 a.m.
Plus, my husband didn't know exactly where the friend lives and couldn't be expected to figure out a convenient meeting spot while driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
OP here again. My daughter has a track and field meet today and had to be on site by 8 a.m.
Plus, my husband didn't know exactly where the friend lives and couldn't be expected to figure out a convenient meeting spot while driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
OP here again. My daughter has a track and field meet today and had to be on site by 8 a.m.
Plus, my husband didn't know exactly where the friend lives and couldn't be expected to figure out a convenient meeting spot while driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
One of many red flags here.
Anonymous wrote:You are worried about missing your daughter’s bedtime by a few minutes and your daughter is 13?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds abusive.
Staying together for the kids only works of there's low conflict. DH is medicated, separate bedrooms, separate social lives, and i make plans to be put off the house with the kids when he is there. That's how i do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm team xDH too. OP should think about how to self-manage her own boundaries.
OP here. For those of you who complain of me micromanaging the situation for calling to suggest a meeting spot (that the friend's parents asked for): i literally just wanted to help, because my husband needed it. For context, he is so bad with maps, that for six months after my daughter started middle school, on the days when he would pick her up, he called me every time to guide him there while he was driving. We live in an area with bad reception, and his GPS typically doesn't work there.