Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you and your husband both work? Can you take time off during the week to meet up for breakfast or lunch?
Now that all the kids are in school, I would try and find time once a week, maybe during the day when the two of you spend an hour just the two of you. You can't really reconnect without time together and not time when you are both exhausted.
Or are the kids responsible enough that you can leave most of them at home and go somewhere on a Saturday morning for breakfast?
There is no way a mom of 11 works outside of the home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure how you carve out time and resources for this without negatively impacting your children (money, time with them spent babysitting, time without talking about all the things you need to talk about each day regarding them, etc...). You chose this unusual lifestyle, so to be blunt, this is just kind of what it is.
The only feasible suggestion I have is to devote your last 10 minutes each evening in bed to either discussion about something you both enjoy or sex. Every night, one or the other.
It's kind of like saying "I moved to Alaska 10 years ago and need help being warmer." I mean...it is what it is.
+1000
You had ELEVEN kids together (and yes, I'm judging you for that) and NOW you don't really feel connected to him? Was this after the 11th kid, or was is somewhere between 7 and 8?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Do you and your husband both work? Can you take time off during the week to meet up for breakfast or lunch?
Now that all the kids are in school, I would try and find time once a week, maybe during the day when the two of you spend an hour just the two of you. You can't really reconnect without time together and not time when you are both exhausted.
Or are the kids responsible enough that you can leave most of them at home and go somewhere on a Saturday morning for breakfast?
Anonymous wrote:If your DH is using porn, get him to stop. Nothing ruins a relationship like porn.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he was involved in raising the kids, maintaining the house and being a good partner and family member. So no big issues. No resentment.
He wasn’t neglectful, verbally abusive, extremely self centered or manipulative for 20-30 years.
Sounds great OP. What’s your actual issue?
Anonymous wrote:I also have way more kids than the DCUM norm so no shade on that. What you need is a project for you and DH that isn’t your kids, something you can do together than plays to one or both of your strengths, can furnish a topic of conversation, and just makes you spend time together without kids (or with kids in the vicinity but that’s not ABOUT kids). Recreate the premodern “family as economic unit” phenomenon, with a hobby. Whether that’s a long-running board game or building a garden or cooking your way through Julia Child or renovating a bathroom or starting a blog depends on your personalities and interests, but it’s hard to get a lot out of “quality time” where you just sit around and gaze into each other’s eyes if you don’t have a lot of time to actually engage together on something else.
Anonymous wrote:You put your husband first, right? And he you?
If you made the mistake of putting your kids first, you might not be able to save the marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have 4 kids under 10, so I’m baffled by these suggestions for 2x/week date night or vacation away unless OP has a level of wealth I can’t fathom (totally possible).
Older siblings can babysit the younger ones…date night doesn’t need to cost much money.
I am actually from a family of 12 (only had two myself…take that for what it’s worth)…I guess my parents knew that with that many kids that divorce just wasn’t an option and you accept your life almost no matter what unless a spouse was violent (which my parents were not). No time for worrying about “losing connection”.
I was thinking that… but that doesn’t seem fair to them at this stage to me with so many young ones.
I think the best advice to OP is probably “wait 5 years.”