Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of guys feel this way when they “take over” the daily tasks. What they don’t realize is that their wife does all of that plus create the infrastructure for those routines. Like I’m sure you have socks and shoes for you son, and toys and books around the house. She probably researched his nap times when he was little and got him on a schedule. She probably got the various sizes of clothes for him that changed every few months the first year plus all the diapers, feeding things, and now potty training gear. She probably looks up milestones and things about illness. Ok, you show up and do a nap and make dinner. It’s “easy.” Cool?
He was a plug and play Saturday sitter and now thinks parenting and managing a house and kids development is easy peasy. Hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the people roasting you have never lived with a person that has some form of OCD, anxiety, or autism (or a combination of these). It is seriously a relief to just do things without their rigidity. I can only recommend some kind of counseling for your wife or couples counseling to discuss this without being insensitive to each other's feelings.
I also think you need to come up with strategies that do not enable your wife's behavior. Like don't be a jerk, but don't give in so easily, either. It's hard. Your son will most likely inherit your wife's tendencies if she spends most of the time with him.
Anxiety and asd causes shutdown mode way more often than OCD mode.
That’s not what’s going on here.
Unclear if OP is just bragging about how he handled half a weekend w a toddler and nauseous wife or what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not getting the child down at 1 versus 1:15 that your wife finds stressful, OP. It’s the downstream consequences. Like he won’t nap well or sleeps too long, and then tantrums all afternoon and evening, and then has trouble going to bed, and it’s all miserable. You haven’t been the primary parent long enough to have been responsible for him through all of that mess, so sure, it doesn’t bother you if he goes down a bit late. Grandparents are famous for having the same attitude you do. “What’s the big deal if she has only ice cream for lunch?!” And “it’s a special occasion, she can stay up a couple of hours late tonight!” Stick around for longer as the person who deals with it when the $&@? hits the fan, and you will see what the big deal is.
Exactly. And if OP is anything like my DH, it’s not actually the difference between 1 and 1:15. It’s that DH when I tell him at 1:15 and there’s no indication that he’s getting baby ready to nap, “DH, baby naps at 1 - are you going to put him down?” DH will respond nastily “Why are you so rigid about naps? It’s fine. He doesn’t need to nap.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly one kid isn't really that much work, especially once they are past the point where they are waking up all the time. I think people should split it to be fair but it's not this insurmountable obstacle.
Clothes are easy, you literally buy the age they are "T" and switch out for summer/winter. Finding a daycare sucks you will only need to do that once or twice (or three times in our case!). Finding a doctor is also a one-off thing. Sick days suck but hopefully you guys can split those up so one person isn't getting screwed working late to keep up.
Two is harder, especially because it's harder to trade off and give one person some down time plus they can fight a lot. I feel for people with three kids, that seems really hard.
No one thing is really hard, but all the things together adds up to a lot, especially for working parents. Finding a doctor, dentist, any other needs can be easy or hard but then you have to bring the kid there. It's not a one-off thing. Injuries and issues come up. Then parent-teacher conference. Lice. Planning summer and vacation childcare. Potentially sports or lessons, choosing them and preparing as needed and bringing the kid. Choosing a school, and academic support if needed, plus school events. Friendships and playdates and birthdays. Some kids are easy but others need more support. The OP is proud of himself, I guess, for doing a half-assed job at the day-to-day stuff for a few weeks. But if he stops to think a little about what's actually involved in a good childhood, he will see that it adds up to a lot.
Feel free to cross off whatever you don't want your child to have, OP. Is it friends? Birthday parties? Medical care? Sports? Please do let us know what you deem unnecessary.
PP here and I still dont think it's that hard with one kid. I wouldn't want to do 100% from a fairness perspective but its definitely manageable esp if the other parent is making some level of contribution. Anyways, I'm just saying I can relate to OP in that it's not that hard with one child. I found it to be more than 2x hard with two kids mainly because there's no switching off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly one kid isn't really that much work, especially once they are past the point where they are waking up all the time. I think people should split it to be fair but it's not this insurmountable obstacle.
Clothes are easy, you literally buy the age they are "T" and switch out for summer/winter. Finding a daycare sucks you will only need to do that once or twice (or three times in our case!). Finding a doctor is also a one-off thing. Sick days suck but hopefully you guys can split those up so one person isn't getting screwed working late to keep up.
Two is harder, especially because it's harder to trade off and give one person some down time plus they can fight a lot. I feel for people with three kids, that seems really hard.
No one thing is really hard, but all the things together adds up to a lot, especially for working parents. Finding a doctor, dentist, any other needs can be easy or hard but then you have to bring the kid there. It's not a one-off thing. Injuries and issues come up. Then parent-teacher conference. Lice. Planning summer and vacation childcare. Potentially sports or lessons, choosing them and preparing as needed and bringing the kid. Choosing a school, and academic support if needed, plus school events. Friendships and playdates and birthdays. Some kids are easy but others need more support. The OP is proud of himself, I guess, for doing a half-assed job at the day-to-day stuff for a few weeks. But if he stops to think a little about what's actually involved in a good childhood, he will see that it adds up to a lot.
Feel free to cross off whatever you don't want your child to have, OP. Is it friends? Birthday parties? Medical care? Sports? Please do let us know what you deem unnecessary.