Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the kid was playing on a screen in your bed, then why not send him to his own bedroom with the screen if that’s where you wanted to do your zoom call? Crisis averted.
I’m sure that she could have done a lot of things if her husband had told her that he couldn’t put the child to bed. But that’s not what happened.
As a veteran parent and all around normal person, if I walked into my room and was surprised to see Larlo playing on a screen in my room minutes before I planned to hop on zoom from my bed (which imho is weird), then my first reaction would not be to track down my DH and yell at him to handle it. Instead, I would have simply told the kid to take the phone to his bedroom and play quietly.
Crisis averted.
If the kid was still up after both parents were done zooming, then I would tell DH to retrieve the phone and finish putting the kid to sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the kid was playing on a screen in your bed, then why not send him to his own bedroom with the screen if that’s where you wanted to do your zoom call? Crisis averted.
I’m sure that she could have done a lot of things if her husband had told her that he couldn’t put the child to bed. But that’s not what happened.
Anonymous wrote:If you can’t deal with both kids one night a week you have no business having 2 kids. Let your H have fun and get one night a week for yourself as well. You are abusive yes.
Anonymous wrote:If the kid was playing on a screen in your bed, then why not send him to his own bedroom with the screen if that’s where you wanted to do your zoom call? Crisis averted.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP here! 21 pages! I've informed DH he is a selfish, lazy dick and I am a controlling, micromanaging harpy with a martyr complex. We spent a good deal of time arguing last night, came to somewhat of a resolution.
The difficult kid is 6, has behavior problems generally that lead to him frequently crawling out of bed and getting into trouble unless sound asleep and we were aiming for 8pm bedtime.
We are the most lax family ever, probably part of the problem that we dont live by strict rules. I had planned on doing my zoom call from our bedroom, so finding a child in there watching youtube was disruptive.
Anonymous wrote:You aren’t the most lax parent if your original post states “he didn’t even bother to read to the kid.” Just saying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your partner asks for help, notice. If they’ve been giving you free and clear private time offer the same.
Agreed.
He did. Kid was fine. Her call was not being disrupted. Kid would have fallen asleep if she had let him be and not freaked out.
^^^ but that would have meant her accepting the fact that DH handled bedtime routine differently than she prefers, which seems to be the crux of this.
Just out of curiosity, do you all do this at work too? Like if you say that you are going to attend a meeting in someone’s place, do you actually just leave a voicemail saying your co-worker can’t make it?
Or do you just do this with your families?
Oh great, here we go with the poor analogies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP here! 21 pages! I've informed DH he is a selfish, lazy dick and I am a controlling, micromanaging harpy with a martyr complex. We spent a good deal of time arguing last night, came to somewhat of a resolution.
The difficult kid is 6, has behavior problems generally that lead to him frequently crawling out of bed and getting into trouble unless sound asleep and we were aiming for 8pm bedtime.
We are the most lax family ever, probably part of the problem that we dont live by strict rules. I had planned on doing my zoom call from our bedroom, so finding a child in there watching youtube was disruptive.
Sounds like you needed to communicate your expectations more clearly. AKA kid must be in his room and asleep before you can enjoy time with your friends. But if you don't actually enforce strict bedtime rules, hard to see what he did wrong other than the kid needed to be in his own room. If he knew you were planning to zoom in the BR, I would have been annoyed too (though not to the point of screaming at him in front of his friends).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess the little woman should shut up and put up. It’s all her fault anyway. Go make me a sandwich.
Oh the drama. Or she could have proceeded with her evening since no one actually did anything wrong.
Hopefully OP has settled down and can see she overreacted, then get to the bottom of what's really bothering her.
And hopefully husband has claimed his responsibility in it as well. It wasn’t a one sided issue.
Actually in this case it was. He literally did nothing wrong. Child was settled and would have fallen asleep, and probably enjoyed the extra treat of being in mommy and daddy's bed. Was not disrupting OP's time with her friends. What's the offense? Be specific.
Good luck getting an answer that makes any sense.
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Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP here! 21 pages! I've informed DH he is a selfish, lazy dick and I am a controlling, micromanaging harpy with a martyr complex. We spent a good deal of time arguing last night, came to somewhat of a resolution.
The difficult kid is 6, has behavior problems generally that lead to him frequently crawling out of bed and getting into trouble unless sound asleep and we were aiming for 8pm bedtime.
We are the most lax family ever, probably part of the problem that we dont live by strict rules. I had planned on doing my zoom call from our bedroom, so finding a child in there watching youtube was disruptive.
Glad you can laugh about it, OP. Hope you both can communicate better and work these things out a little less dramatically in the future.