Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want to do a weekend away? Have you even asked him to make his work schedule work for you to take a long weekend away? I don't know you just seem to be talking about fairness and about it being your turn but it doesn't seem like you've even talked to him about it. For all you know he could say "sure, I can work my schedule out so I you can go away for a few days"
You’re right. I think I’m realizing now that my issue is that he doesn’t ask, he just tells, because his going away doesn’t affect my schedule at all. I’m a little resentful of that, I think.
Anonymous wrote:As others have said. The first trip isn't really optional if your DH wants to advance in his career he has to go many times the difference between getting a promotion and not is who showed up and who didn't .
As for the second trip bonding with friends is good.
It doesn't seem like he's doing this often. So yes saying no just to say no just to be a PITA because you can't advocate for yourself is unreasonable and childish.
Maybe you should take a page out of his book. Plan a trip for yourself or with your friends and inform him you are going. He'll figure it out and your kids will be okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want to do a weekend away? Have you even asked him to make his work schedule work for you to take a long weekend away? I don't know you just seem to be talking about fairness and about it being your turn but it doesn't seem like you've even talked to him about it. For all you know he could say "sure, I can work my schedule out so I you can go away for a few days"
You’re right. I think I’m realizing now that my issue is that he doesn’t ask, he just tells, because his going away doesn’t affect my schedule at all. I’m a little resentful of that, I think.
That’s my DH. He always says I can go away whenever I want, but then when I plan something he has 50 reasons for why he can’t make dropoff and pickup happen that week because work is busy or whatever. And then the kids freak out because he doesn’t make meals and can’t help with hair or school uniforms. And then if I try to plan something, none of my friends are free anyway.
The truth is that DH and his friends have the bandwidth and support at home to meet up and travel together, and my friends and I don’t plan things because they’re in the same situation with their DHs.
It is what it is so I make the most of when DH is gone. I randomly repaint rooms, get food only I like for dinner, and let the kids watch all the tv they want.
What does this even mean?! He doesn't know how clothes get put on? I mean, seriously. It feels like you're actually enabling this behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's doing this twice in quick succession often - like he'll do it again in two months, then again in another two months - I think you're fine to ask him not to.
If he rarely does this but wants to now, I'd try to make it work.
Could you take a long weekend to go visit a friend you haven't seen for a while? Or is part of the issue that you don't find it fun to actually plan a trip for yourself like that, so you're kind of upset he's leaving and also wondering why you've made a life/personality where you can't enjoy yourself with friends in New York too? (I might feel that way... I have so many friends I'd in theory love to go visit and somehow I just never actually buy the plane tickets to do it.)
I think this is part of it. He doesn’t have to think, he just goes, because I’m there by default. I wish I could just spontaneously be like, you know what, I’m going out of town. My thing is, he just will have gone on this fun work trip with colleagues who are friends, too. If he can figure out how to have a four day weekend in June for himself, why can’t WE do something? Or why can’t I do something? If I want to do something, I have to make it work around his schedule.
Why? Tell him you're going out of town and let him figure out the childcare if his work schedule is an issue.
I don't get this - when I go out of town I just talk to my husband and the dates and then I leave. He is in charge of figuring out how to deal with everything when I'm gone. Same with if he leaves. I don't say well you have to plan for this and that. Just go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suck it up and plan better to go with friends or go somewhere yourself. Controlling someone else and preventing them from enjoying their life never ends well.
I see your point, but I’m not controlling him, just asking for balance.
But you're asking for balance within a four-month period of time. Consider the balance over ten years of marriage, or more.
This is ridiculous. The balance needs to happen NOW, not in five/10/however many years when the childcare situation is changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's doing this twice in quick succession often - like he'll do it again in two months, then again in another two months - I think you're fine to ask him not to.
If he rarely does this but wants to now, I'd try to make it work.
Could you take a long weekend to go visit a friend you haven't seen for a while? Or is part of the issue that you don't find it fun to actually plan a trip for yourself like that, so you're kind of upset he's leaving and also wondering why you've made a life/personality where you can't enjoy yourself with friends in New York too? (I might feel that way... I have so many friends I'd in theory love to go visit and somehow I just never actually buy the plane tickets to do it.)
I think this is part of it. He doesn’t have to think, he just goes, because I’m there by default. I wish I could just spontaneously be like, you know what, I’m going out of town. My thing is, he just will have gone on this fun work trip with colleagues who are friends, too. If he can figure out how to have a four day weekend in June for himself, why can’t WE do something? Or why can’t I do something? If I want to do something, I have to make it work around his schedule.
I understand this. I’m also the default childcare. DH’s schedule is erratic. Sometimes he works late. Sometimes he works nights. If he wants to leave for a week, it’s no big deal. I’ve got it covered.
Meanwhile, if I want to leave for a long weekend it needs to be planned 6 months in advance, and he needs to take off work. Sometimes it feels unfair, and I know that he will never, never get what it’s like to always have to consider the kids and childcare with every decision you make. To never go in early or stay late or go on the team building trip that might advance your career without planning far ahead and making childcare arrangements.
Of course, the flip side of being able to leave for a week whenever you want to and not being needed for your family is that you are appreciated when you are around, but you aren’t really needed by your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suck it up and plan better to go with friends or go somewhere yourself. Controlling someone else and preventing them from enjoying their life never ends well.
I see your point, but I’m not controlling him, just asking for balance.
But you're asking for balance within a four-month period of time. Consider the balance over ten years of marriage, or more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you want to do a weekend away? Have you even asked him to make his work schedule work for you to take a long weekend away? I don't know you just seem to be talking about fairness and about it being your turn but it doesn't seem like you've even talked to him about it. For all you know he could say "sure, I can work my schedule out so I you can go away for a few days"
You’re right. I think I’m realizing now that my issue is that he doesn’t ask, he just tells, because his going away doesn’t affect my schedule at all. I’m a little resentful of that, I think.
That’s my DH. He always says I can go away whenever I want, but then when I plan something he has 50 reasons for why he can’t make dropoff and pickup happen that week because work is busy or whatever. And then the kids freak out because he doesn’t make meals and can’t help with hair or school uniforms. And then if I try to plan something, none of my friends are free anyway.
The truth is that DH and his friends have the bandwidth and support at home to meet up and travel together, and my friends and I don’t plan things because they’re in the same situation with their DHs.
It is what it is so I make the most of when DH is gone. I randomly repaint rooms, get food only I like for dinner, and let the kids watch all the tv they want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's doing this twice in quick succession often - like he'll do it again in two months, then again in another two months - I think you're fine to ask him not to.
If he rarely does this but wants to now, I'd try to make it work.
Could you take a long weekend to go visit a friend you haven't seen for a while? Or is part of the issue that you don't find it fun to actually plan a trip for yourself like that, so you're kind of upset he's leaving and also wondering why you've made a life/personality where you can't enjoy yourself with friends in New York too? (I might feel that way... I have so many friends I'd in theory love to go visit and somehow I just never actually buy the plane tickets to do it.)
I think this is part of it. He doesn’t have to think, he just goes, because I’m there by default. I wish I could just spontaneously be like, you know what, I’m going out of town. My thing is, he just will have gone on this fun work trip with colleagues who are friends, too. If he can figure out how to have a four day weekend in June for himself, why can’t WE do something? Or why can’t I do something? If I want to do something, I have to make it work around his schedule.
Why? Tell him you're going out of town and let him figure out the childcare if his work schedule is an issue.
I don't get this - when I go out of town I just talk to my husband and the dates and then I leave. He is in charge of figuring out how to deal with everything when I'm gone. Same with if he leaves. I don't say well you have to plan for this and that. Just go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's doing this twice in quick succession often - like he'll do it again in two months, then again in another two months - I think you're fine to ask him not to.
If he rarely does this but wants to now, I'd try to make it work.
Could you take a long weekend to go visit a friend you haven't seen for a while? Or is part of the issue that you don't find it fun to actually plan a trip for yourself like that, so you're kind of upset he's leaving and also wondering why you've made a life/personality where you can't enjoy yourself with friends in New York too? (I might feel that way... I have so many friends I'd in theory love to go visit and somehow I just never actually buy the plane tickets to do it.)
I think this is part of it. He doesn’t have to think, he just goes, because I’m there by default. I wish I could just spontaneously be like, you know what, I’m going out of town. My thing is, he just will have gone on this fun work trip with colleagues who are friends, too. If he can figure out how to have a four day weekend in June for himself, why can’t WE do something? Or why can’t I do something? If I want to do something, I have to make it work around his schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suck it up and plan better to go with friends or go somewhere yourself. Controlling someone else and preventing them from enjoying their life never ends well.
I see your point, but I’m not controlling him, just asking for balance.