Anonymous wrote:This. I don't understand why people (usually women) feel the need to stifle or eliminate their spouse's friendships outside of the marriage. I isn't as if he is hanging out 3-4 times a week. Do you ever get together with your girlfriends? If not, you should.Anonymous wrote:I think it's healthy to have (non sexual) relationships with the same sex even if you're married. It's not so much as they "come first" as it's they are a just a different kind of relationship.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think it's healthy to have (non sexual) relationships with the same sex even if you're married. It's not so much as they "come first" as it's they are a just a different kind of relationship.
This. I don't understand why people (usually women) feel the need to stifle or eliminate their spouse's friendships outside of the marriage. I isn't as if he is hanging out 3-4 times a week. Do you ever get together with your girlfriends? If not, you should.
BECAUSE IT'S ALL ABOUT ME ME ME ME!!!!!!
Anonymous wrote:This. I don't understand why people (usually women) feel the need to stifle or eliminate their spouse's friendships outside of the marriage. I isn't as if he is hanging out 3-4 times a week. Do you ever get together with your girlfriends? If not, you should.Anonymous wrote:I think it's healthy to have (non sexual) relationships with the same sex even if you're married. It's not so much as they "come first" as it's they are a just a different kind of relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:C'mon. He's going out 2-3 times a week for several drinks while she is home with a newborn and a toddler???? On top of working 55-60 hours a week? In what world is this okay? I agree wholeheartedly that people need time to themselves, see friends, etc, but it should be all hands on deck when you have a new baby in the house.
If you can't have a reasonable discussion around roles and responsibilties, then perhaps couples counseling is in order. I agree that the issue of his drinking should at least be explored (and I say this as a regular and sometimes heavy drinker).
From the sounds of it, he's out 2-3x a week since the birth of the first child. He went out once in 1 week for 4.5 hours after the birth of the second child, who was born "a few weeks ago." No mention of other outings.
In my world this is okay. Everyone, no matter who they are, deserves some down time. What if it's a hobby he likes to do 2-3x a week? Or going to the gym? Or reading? For crissake, the man works 55-60 hours a week, likely to support the lifestyle OP wants.
I said that everyone deserves down time. Obviously it's not a one-time thing since she's posting here and says it's ongoing. She says she works full-time, too. I don't understand people who have demanding jobs and then insist that they need hours and hours a week to themselves to decompress drinking with high school buddies while their spouses struggle alone with two small children.
I guess that's what you did, though, so it makes sense to you.
Anonymous wrote:Why aren't YOU going out with your friends? That's healthy and necessary and would greatly reduce your bitterness.
Anonymous wrote:It does sound like the drinking might be an issue, especially since you felt the need up front to say you "don't prevent him from drinking at home." Was that just to say that the drinking isn't an issue? Or is it an issue for you but you don't say anything about it?
I think it's irrelevant whether one or both of you are introverts. I'd frame it as an issue of free time. Do you and he get equal amounts of free time, doing whatever you wish? Do all of you get adequate family time together? (This is less relevant now with a newborn, but it will be more of an issue later.) Does he schedule his time with friends to make it more convenient for you? (E.g. if they're going to be out late drinking, he could put the preschooler to bed first.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a female and I don't think either of you is being reasonable. You knew when you married him that he likes his time spent with his close friends. He needs his downtime, and for him, that happens to be drinking with his buddies for a few hours.
Yes you have young children now, but that's not an excuse for you to be this controlling or to tell him he's not allowed to have a life. He made a concession to reduce his outings from 4x a week to "2-3x a week."
You're annoyed he went out for 3 hours 6 day after you gave birth. Wtf.
What exactly is the issue?
Are you annoyed that he goes out so much that YOU don't have the time to see your friends?
Or he goes out so much that you don't believe that he does his fair share of work?
Or are you really that much of a bitch?
Maybe the solution is to hire a babysitter several times a week so you both get some breathing time.
I agree with this (except the part about you being a bitch).
2-3x/week out with friends without your kids in tow is a LOT for a parent of young kids. Once a week, sure. But this is extreme. It's not about him not being allowed to have a life, it's that with both people working and having two small kids, there isn't that much free time for either of them combined, let alone just one.
Anonymous wrote:Why aren't YOU going out with your friends? That's healthy and necessary and would greatly reduce your bitterness.