Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you outsource a ton of things? It seems to me that a benefit to remaining married is that you have access to his paycheck. So use it.
This. Get a nanny (or two) to help out so you can have down time. It’s really OK.
I know it sucks, OP. And I know you’re doing it all. And it is completely unfair. But based on what you have written, divorcing and coparenting with this man will be a nightmare.
I keep coming back to that - it makes me sick to think what I put up with (the lashing out when he's angry, the picking up after another adult, the having my "partner" sit around and not lift a finger to help his family while I struggle to meet everyone's needs) but I think the uncertainty of what he'd do in divorce and the potential impact on the kids is a huge huge risk. I really wish I could just emotionally except the situation any not carry around so much anger about it in the moment when i'm trying to calm 2 kids and make dinner while he sits there, or i'm getting up at 6 for the millionth weekend morning while he gets to sleep in 2 weekend mornings every single weekend, or while i'm picking up his laundry all over our room so I can have a clean tidy background. A therapist once said "you can't force yourself to accept things that are unacceptable" but the potential divorce outcomes also feel unacceptable so i've got to find a way to make peace with one of the options
Anonymous wrote:I'm the person you quoted. I get this. I loved my dad; my dad was the disciplinarian but also the "fun" parent. He coached our sports; he bought extravagant Christmas presents for us; he took us fishing and camping, etc. But he was awful to my mom. I still lost respect for her putting up with his bs. I wanted her to be strong and think about us kids and what we were witnessing. Your kids are young so probably not there yet, but something to think about. Bottom line, I wanted my mom and dad to both be happy, and I felt like they would be if they were apart.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a very fair question. As a kid, I wished my mom would have left my dad. It didn't happen until I was in high school, and by then, I had lost a lot of respect for my mother. She should have left long before that.Anonymous wrote:Why do your think your kids want him around? I wanted my abusive drunkard father to go away and never come back. He was abusive towards my mother, not us, but it was very hard to watch. We get along fine now that he lives alone, but there was no reason for him to be around when I was a kid. I begged my mom to move away from him. I didn't care where I lived, but I wanted the two separately.
Even if he goes for 50%, he will give that up in no time.
I don't know - I wrestle with this. Its clear at least one of them loves him and can get wild fun with him in a way he can't with me. I think my other may actually be more on edge around him but has had times they were closer. I don't know if staying together so they can get the good and largely be shielded from the bad (eg he's "overwhelmed" so I just whisk the kids away and dad disappears to bedroom versus the kids being subjected dad's tantrum) is better than either having some shared custody with no shielding or no relationship with him at all (again, I don't know which way DH would go in a divorce. I don't think being upset about child support would factor into it and i'd waive it if that was the case. we have enough savings and i have enough earning power i'd be fine)
I'm the person you quoted. I get this. I loved my dad; my dad was the disciplinarian but also the "fun" parent. He coached our sports; he bought extravagant Christmas presents for us; he took us fishing and camping, etc. But he was awful to my mom. I still lost respect for her putting up with his bs. I wanted her to be strong and think about us kids and what we were witnessing. Your kids are young so probably not there yet, but something to think about. Bottom line, I wanted my mom and dad to both be happy, and I felt like they would be if they were apart.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a very fair question. As a kid, I wished my mom would have left my dad. It didn't happen until I was in high school, and by then, I had lost a lot of respect for my mother. She should have left long before that.Anonymous wrote:Why do your think your kids want him around? I wanted my abusive drunkard father to go away and never come back. He was abusive towards my mother, not us, but it was very hard to watch. We get along fine now that he lives alone, but there was no reason for him to be around when I was a kid. I begged my mom to move away from him. I didn't care where I lived, but I wanted the two separately.
Even if he goes for 50%, he will give that up in no time.
I don't know - I wrestle with this. Its clear at least one of them loves him and can get wild fun with him in a way he can't with me. I think my other may actually be more on edge around him but has had times they were closer. I don't know if staying together so they can get the good and largely be shielded from the bad (eg he's "overwhelmed" so I just whisk the kids away and dad disappears to bedroom versus the kids being subjected dad's tantrum) is better than either having some shared custody with no shielding or no relationship with him at all (again, I don't know which way DH would go in a divorce. I don't think being upset about child support would factor into it and i'd waive it if that was the case. we have enough savings and i have enough earning power i'd be fine)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you outsource a ton of things? It seems to me that a benefit to remaining married is that you have access to his paycheck. So use it.
This. Get a nanny (or two) to help out so you can have down time. It’s really OK.
I know it sucks, OP. And I know you’re doing it all. And it is completely unfair. But based on what you have written, divorcing and coparenting with this man will be a nightmare.
I keep coming back to that - it makes me sick to think what I put up with (the lashing out when he's angry, the picking up after another adult, the having my "partner" sit around and not lift a finger to help his family while I struggle to meet everyone's needs) but I think the uncertainty of what he'd do in divorce and the potential impact on the kids is a huge huge risk. I really wish I could just emotionally except the situation any not carry around so much anger about it in the moment when i'm trying to calm 2 kids and make dinner while he sits there, or i'm getting up at 6 for the millionth weekend morning while he gets to sleep in 2 weekend mornings every single weekend, or while i'm picking up his laundry all over our room so I can have a clean tidy background. A therapist once said "you can't force yourself to accept things that are unacceptable" but the potential divorce outcomes also feel unacceptable so i've got to find a way to make peace with one of the options
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you outsource a ton of things? It seems to me that a benefit to remaining married is that you have access to his paycheck. So use it.
This. Get a nanny (or two) to help out so you can have down time. It’s really OK.
I know it sucks, OP. And I know you’re doing it all. And it is completely unfair. But based on what you have written, divorcing and coparenting with this man will be a nightmare.
Anonymous wrote:Can you outsource a ton of things? It seems to me that a benefit to remaining married is that you have access to his paycheck. So use it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much do you guys make? My DH is helpful but very busy with work (and it's usually from home, so I know it's actual work). I hire out a lot of help, from chef-prepared weekly meals that I have to heat up to grocery delivery, to all of the house cleaning and laundry other than DH and my laundry, and I have an after-school nanny/driver who helps me juggle shuttling the kids to their activities and with other small household tasks. It's still a lot of work to manage the help on top of a job, and I'm still the default parent if someone gets sick, but it's better than the situation you describe. And at least your DH makes more than you - that should help with some of your resentment.
We do hire out a lot and it definitely helps - my rage would be through the roof if not. But I only want to co-parent with a nanny so much, its not just the physical labor - its that any parent time the kids get has to come from me while he plays video games or watches football for hours on the weekends, that his unable or unwilling to talk through what to do about our kids adhd diagnosis and unwilling to participate in a parenting class to learn strategies to manage it because he's so "overwhelmed", that I have no dependable back-up partner if I'm feeling really sick one day and just need someone else to do bedtime etc. I think the core of it is that I feel like I'm raising our kids entirely on my own without a dependable partner for any aspect of it other than paying the bills....which is a real and important thing but not the only thing kids need. And also that he hides behind mental health as an excuse when he does things like leave wet towels on my side of the bed or dirty laundry all over our bedroom which is also my office! (he has his own office in our house...i cant imagine what he'd do if i walked into it and left my trash and laundry around it)
Anonymous wrote:He contributes, makes more, works more, but refuses to enter into concrete agreements with you to precisely define his contributions and you think he’s the problem?
Anonymous wrote:He contributes, makes more, works more, but refuses to enter into concrete agreements with you to precisely define his contributions and you think he’s the problem?
Anonymous wrote:This is a very fair question. As a kid, I wished my mom would have left my dad. It didn't happen until I was in high school, and by then, I had lost a lot of respect for my mother. She should have left long before that.Anonymous wrote:Why do your think your kids want him around? I wanted my abusive drunkard father to go away and never come back. He was abusive towards my mother, not us, but it was very hard to watch. We get along fine now that he lives alone, but there was no reason for him to be around when I was a kid. I begged my mom to move away from him. I didn't care where I lived, but I wanted the two separately.
Even if he goes for 50%, he will give that up in no time.