Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he DGAF about dinner, the daycare teachers, and the kid activity. Men do what's important to them, that's the bottom line.
Correct, ensuring that the boss is happy so he can continue providing for his family.
Exactly. I'm sure there would be no activities if dad lost job
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he DGAF about dinner, the daycare teachers, and the kid activity. Men do what's important to them, that's the bottom line.
Correct, ensuring that the boss is happy so he can continue providing for his family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So he sets out ten minutes late because he’s on the phone with his boss. What should he do, hang up on him because he has a nagging wife? And why does it reduce dinner time to only 15 minutes? He must be a saint married to someone like you.
I'm not OP but I thought she made it pretty clear that her older child had evening activities, so presumably that means they have to leave the house at 6:30, for example, so if they sit down at 6, then they have 30 minutes for dinner. If they sit down at 6:15 because her husband picked the younger child up later, then they only have 15 minutes.
OP, I'll say that this season of life will pass (when you have one in daycare and on doing activities), so if I were you I would be willing to adopt a little flexibility here. Maybe don't plan to eat dinner together every night, or at least the nights you have other activities. That's just one example, but there are lots of ways I think you can relax a little here.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't he get in the car while on the phone?
But yes, you're overreacting and seem like a micromanager
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he DGAF about dinner, the daycare teachers, and the kid activity. Men do what's important to them, that's the bottom line.
Anonymous wrote:So he sets out ten minutes late because he’s on the phone with his boss. What should he do, hang up on him because he has a nagging wife? And why does it reduce dinner time to only 15 minutes? He must be a saint married to someone like you.
Anonymous wrote:So he sets out ten minutes late because he’s on the phone with his boss. What should he do, hang up on him because he has a nagging wife? And why does it reduce dinner time to only 15 minutes? He must be a saint married to someone like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he is a people-pleaser who tells you what you want to hear but isn't willing to follow through. And I get that it is maddening. Because you can't really believe anything he commits to. Or else your communication is poor and he actually means "Unless my boss calls me" and he isn't saying that caveat aloud. You need to be more clear with him (and I know you felt like you were clear but he's obviously not catching your meaning) that a boss phone call is not a good reason. If that means he doesn't do this task, he does a different task.
I had this fight with my husband so many times. "If you can't do it, don't tell me you will do it." "Why did you agree to this if you won't actually do it?" It took a year of having that conversation before he got it. Now he only agrees to do things that are realistically possible.
Same! That's a reoccurring fight in our house. DH agrees then doesn't follow through. I'm glad your DH finally changed his approach. Mine won't say no to anything then gets mad when I'm upset about him failing to uphold his agreement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he is a people-pleaser who tells you what you want to hear but isn't willing to follow through. And I get that it is maddening. Because you can't really believe anything he commits to. Or else your communication is poor and he actually means "Unless my boss calls me" and he isn't saying that caveat aloud. You need to be more clear with him (and I know you felt like you were clear but he's obviously not catching your meaning) that a boss phone call is not a good reason. If that means he doesn't do this task, he does a different task.
I had this fight with my husband so many times. "If you can't do it, don't tell me you will do it." "Why did you agree to this if you won't actually do it?" It took a year of having that conversation before he got it. Now he only agrees to do things that are realistically possible.
Same! That's a reoccurring fight in our house. DH agrees then doesn't follow through. I'm glad your DH finally changed his approach. Mine won't say no to anything then gets mad when I'm upset about him failing to uphold his agreement.