Anonymous wrote:Waa your wife an only child by chance? I am, and life was fine until my 2nd child was born and there were all these annoying sibling dynamics I was just not prepared for. I retreated a lot, went back to work to hide. Things have gotten better with time and I am leaning back into my mom role much more these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you take the kids away for two weeks? That makes no sense. If you have the money hire help or suggest she go part-time if she has a job that would allow it.
Op here
Sorry, I was just trying to find something that helps, but I can see how extreme that sounds.
As for the suggestion of her going part time she is incredibly career driven. I actually did suggest that to her as a way to relieve some of the pressure as we, but I completely understand why she doesn't want to do it. Her career is very important to her and I respect that she doesn't want to step back.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you take the kids away for two weeks? That makes no sense. If you have the money hire help or suggest she go part-time if she has a job that would allow it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went through this as a mom. It wasn’t until my youngest was 4 that I really snapped out of it.
What helped me the most was getting alone time to do the things I did before kids. I think people underestimate how much becoming a mother changes your identity, and I had to re-discover myself. I also needed solo time away from the house (being in the house is just a reminder of everything I need to do).
What did your wife like to do before kids? Rather than the extreme of a 2 week trip, what if she got a weekend day and maybe a weekend evening to go do whatever she wants to do?
Op here
Before kids, she really loved going out and doing hikes. She was definitely more active and social.
I actually tried a smaller version of what you're suggesting a couple of months ago. I took the girls away for a night so she could have the house to herself and go do whatever she wanted. She did go out, but honestly, it didn't make any difference at all. When we came back, she was just as withdrawn and checked out as before. It seems like a break isn't the cure here.
I completely agree with you (and others) that therapy would be great. The problem is, whenever I bring it up, she very strongly shuts it down and calls it a waste of time. She refuses to even consider it.
How do I make therapy happen when she outright refuses? Do I ask more forcefully? I don't want to back her into a corner or be controlling, but I'm running out of ideas on how to get her to just try it. I really don't want to sound negative I still love her and want desperately to find a way to make it work for us
Anonymous wrote:She sounds clinically depressed. But it probably doesn’t matter because only a troll would say they have a 28 month old, you doofus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why aren't you married?
Op here
we haven't done the formal, legal paperwork, but we did have a commitment ceremony. For all intents and purposes, we are all but married. So as far as our relationship and our family goes, the commitment is there.
Anonymous wrote:I went through this as a mom. It wasn’t until my youngest was 4 that I really snapped out of it.
What helped me the most was getting alone time to do the things I did before kids. I think people underestimate how much becoming a mother changes your identity, and I had to re-discover myself. I also needed solo time away from the house (being in the house is just a reminder of everything I need to do).
What did your wife like to do before kids? Rather than the extreme of a 2 week trip, what if she got a weekend day and maybe a weekend evening to go do whatever she wants to do?
Anonymous wrote:Why aren't you married?