Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
Good. Teach her that theft doesn't matter if it's small, right?
Anonymous wrote:Op also had a "break" seven days a week during nap time, since she explicitly stated that she does not do chores during that time.
Maybe you would feel less the need for a break on weekends if you had more of a break during the week, so look for weekday help.
There is something strange about your family dynamic-- no weekend evenings with your husband? Weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I also find it sad that you and your husband are treating your toddler like a hot potato. There are simple things that you can do as a family. For example, on Saturday morning have a pancake breakfast together. I can tell you that my toddler is happiest when she, DH, and I are all together and DH and I also enjoy this time. I think you guys may want to seriously consider not having more children. I am not saying this to be mean or harsh but I'm not sure how your marriage can survive this for too long. It sounds like you are coworkers managing a task.
OP here. I did mention that mealtimes are our family time--dinner during the week and most meals on the weekend when husband is not working. We also do a pancake breakfast on the weekend.
This thread made me realize that growing up, we had zero "family time" except for maybe a few times a year. My father was always tired from work, and spent his weekends relaxing and reading, and my mother took me places. We almost never had "family time" and I know it was the same with my husband's family. Is family time really that important?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I also find it sad that you and your husband are treating your toddler like a hot potato. There are simple things that you can do as a family. For example, on Saturday morning have a pancake breakfast together. I can tell you that my toddler is happiest when she, DH, and I are all together and DH and I also enjoy this time. I think you guys may want to seriously consider not having more children. I am not saying this to be mean or harsh but I'm not sure how your marriage can survive this for too long. It sounds like you are coworkers managing a task.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you need a weekend babysitter? If you had 15 hours of help during the week, wouldn't that help things a bit?
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to motherhood. I find it incredibly hard to believe you can't get anything done during the day. Do you play all day long ? I had 3 in diapers and still managed to cook, clean, go out shopping, do laundry. The machines today are great, they do the work now, all you have to do is put it in and take it out.
Correction, you don't watch your kid. You parent. He's not a pet.
As for your husband, he's got a legitimate gripe. You are a lazy wife, self absorbed while he works non stop. Grow up Princess. Why did you have a kid if you didn't want to be a mother ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. There is no way I can do housework during the day other than cleaning the kitchen. I can clean the kitchen and load/unload dishwasher while my toddler is finishing lunch, but other than that, it's hard unless I can get some things done during naptime. Toddler takes one 2 hour nap per day. I usually do a load or two of laundry and some tidying up if I have the energy. But often I am worn out from our morning activity (running after him at gym class or something) so I'm too tired to do housework during his nap.
And I never do errands with him. It's just too stressful. He will cry the whole time. He is a high needs toddler and cries a lot/is cranky a lot while out.
You sound high maintenance, OP. I'm not surprised that your Dh needs more alone time.
Unhelpful, and inaccurate. Ignore this person, OP.
It sounds like you just need to suck it up and run errands with your toddler, even if he is whiny. IMO it's not a good idea to structure your life around his (temporary, harmless) unhappiness - think of what this is teaching him.
Otherwise, your DH sounds rather selfish. I know he works a lot, but so do you!
I think hiring help is your best option. Tuesday and Thursdays from, say, 9-1 so you can go to the salon, or look at books, or just go have coffee and read a newspaper. What you've described sounds awful! Also, have a date night! At least once a month.
Anonymous wrote:I would much rather run errands the way I do it now, one evening per week, after bedtime. It's so much easier that way. I can shop leisurely without my toddler crying/fussing during errands. I also view errands time as alone time.
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to motherhood. I find it incredibly hard to believe you can't get anything done during the day. Do you play all day long ? I had 3 in diapers and still managed to cook, clean, go out shopping, do laundry. The machines today are great, they do the work now, all you have to do is put it in and take it out.
Correction, you don't watch your kid. You parent. He's not a pet.
As for your husband, he's got a legitimate gripe. You are a lazy wife, self absorbed while he works non stop. Grow up Princess. Why did you have a kid if you didn't want to be a mother ?