Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.
Your reaction seems a bit dramatic OP.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Where the heck do you all live? I live in Prince George's County, grew up here, and sometimes remember to lock my doors. My husband, on the other hand, grew up in very safe rural New England and is an OBSESSIVE locker. Gets frustrated with me. Instead of it being a turn on, it's a turn off. Don't be so paranoid!
Like one of the PPs said, every time my car was broken into, it was locked. They actually did more damage smashing windows and then the damage to the steering column when they actually did take it once (it was recovered). When I lived in DC, it was easier to just leave it open. Please Mr. or Mrs. Crackhead, rifle through, take the contents and do not break my window again.
I'm not sure realistically who will be breaking into your home in the early morning hours (when spouse is out for a run). Most burglaries are when people are NOT home. Our burglaries around here --- though very rare -- happen in the daytime.
You do hear about the egregious home invasions -- but I think you'd be more likely to be chosen for the next space shuttle mission than have this happen to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.
Your reaction seems a bit dramatic OP.
+1000
The chances of having an actual home invasion/rape/kidnapping are really, really small.
Paranoia and fear-mongering is deeply unattractive. Poor DH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.
Your reaction seems a bit dramatic OP.
+1000
The chances of having an actual home invasion/rape/kidnapping are really, really small.
Paranoia and fear-mongering is deeply unattractive. Poor DH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.
Your reaction seems a bit dramatic OP.
Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Where the heck do you all live? I live in Prince George's County, grew up here, and sometimes remember to lock my doors. My husband, on the other hand, grew up in very safe rural New England and is an OBSESSIVE locker. Gets frustrated with me. Instead of it being a turn on, it's a turn off. Don't be so paranoid!
Like one of the PPs said, every time my car was broken into, it was locked. They actually did more damage smashing windows and then the damage to the steering column when they actually did take it once (it was recovered). When I lived in DC, it was easier to just leave it open. Please Mr. or Mrs. Crackhead, rifle through, take the contents and do not break my window again.
I'm not sure realistically who will be breaking into your home in the early morning hours (when spouse is out for a run). Most burglaries are when people are NOT home. Our burglaries around here --- though very rare -- happen in the daytime.
You do hear about the egregious home invasions -- but I think you'd be more likely to be chosen for the next space shuttle mission than have this happen to you.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. The problem is DH's blatant disregard for OP's concerns. My DH is like this, too. I would love a viable answer.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for all the comments.
The problem is that if I want to go to sleep before he does I am nervous that he will walk the dog and come in without locking up. So I am always getting up to check. I am the sentry. Even on vacations he does not have his guard up as one should. Cars not always locked.
My routine is checking front and back doors. In summer I check windows that the kids might leave open. I check the door to the basement and sometimes basement doors that we rarely use. I check the garage doors and door to the garage and check the cars. One is parked outside with the garage door opener in it. Again, about 40% of the time one door leading to the outside is open. Last night it was the garage door, wide open. Nothing stolen, I think that he walked the dog and did not lock it. NO dog is worth that, and believe me, I am starting to think about whether the dog is worth keeping. One of my parents expressed concern about this sloppiness, it is just a turn off, can't explain it any more than that.
Anonymous wrote:about 40% of the time when I check at night, one of the doors is unlocked. I feel really discouraged now as it is an offputting sloppy habit. It is as if he does not care about the safety of his family.
Kids are getting to the age where I can start showing them how to lock up. I have a plan to upgrade the security system.
I can't explain it, but this habit really turns me off, like he is saying, "here world, come take my family, attack my kids, it's OK". I don't get a sense of any paternal instinct.