Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
I'm sorry but what the hell does scratch made (except for the crust) mean? Did you make the sauce and cheese? You're kidding yourself if you think this is homemade pizza, get over yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
LOL! Your medal is in the mail.
Anonymous wrote:OP I agree it is exhausting to take a toddler to gym class! And I am in pretty good shape. But there's something about the running, lifting, redirecting, rinse, lather, repeat, over, and over, and over, that takes it out of me. So you're not alone. And if you have the option to do errands without your toddler, of course it is easier, smoother, and more pleasant. A few hours at Target by myself is better than a spa day.
I agree with PPs that both you and DH seem to get plenty of alone time, but that you guys seem to get very little family and couple time. But what concerned me most about your post, frankly, is the extent to which both you and your DH seem to be "keeping score." The thing about marriage is that it's never going to be equal. It only works well if you are both flexible and if you both keep the other person's needs in mind as well as your own. If your DH feels he needs more alone time, find out what he means by that. When does he want it? Is he proposing that you take on solo childcare for even more time than you already do? Or is he just not that into spending so much time alone with a toddler? What if instead of splitting up the weekends, he "sleeps in" until 10 a.m. and then from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., you guys hang out all together, including during naptime? THat sounds like so much more fun. It doesn' thave to be the same every weekend day. Mix it up, try different things, see how it goes.
I also think if your DH is really sleeping in until 3 p.m. on weekends, even with his work schedule, that is not healthy. He is either depressed, hungover, physically ill, or hiding out. None of those things are good. Talk to him from a place of genuine concern and find out what's going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
To be fair, some toddlers are easier to run errands with then others. I have had four and one at that age was a total PITA, loathed strollers and shopping carts, wanted to walk, etc. But OP has a lot of time to run errands solo. I think they have a very odd family dynamic. No one seems to want to be with each other.
OP here. Why do you think our family dynamic is odd? I don't get that. The issue is that with husband working 2 weekends per month (traveling for work), we only have 2 weekends for "family time." In the warmer months there are more things we enjoy doing together--parks, festivals, fairs, day trips, etc. but in the winter months I really can't think of anything that we could do that would be "family time." My husband likes to have father-son time alone with our son since he barely sees him during the week, so they go to different activities together on the weekends in the morning. I don't really see what the point is of me tagging along to these since I do them all week long, you know--playgroup, gym class, etc. We don't have any local family to visit, which could be a good family time activity. We used to take our son out to restaurants until the last few months, when that became a lot more difficult and unpleasant, so we don't go out to restaurants as a family anymore. So I guess I don't really have any ideas on what could be family time with a toddler in the winter months. Toddler is 14 months.