Anonymous wrote:It's not the last minute run to the store that is the issue. Her comments seem to suggest that she needs/wants more time with you and is not getting it. And your schedule is evidence of that. She can't be getting what she needs.
And while I think it's great you give entirely to the kids on the weekend, running errands and to activities is not quality time with the kids.
It's time to re-evaluate, imo. I'm not trying to be unkind. I'm sure you're balancing a lot of things. But, your kids are only young once and you can't get that time back.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone criticizing OP for her work choice - give it a rest. We don't know her personal circumstances. Maybe she's supporting family overseas, or was decimated by the Great Recession. Moms have a right to work.
What's going on here is totally normal behavior from a tween: they want more than you can give. Plus, OP/DH don't have enough help or haven't figured out how to organize their home life yet. OP, there's some good advice on here. You need more help! Even if that's just a phone app to help you all with school work calendars, etc. Maybe hire a babysitter for the weekend and take your daughter out for one-on-one time. Have family meeting on Sunday to figure out what needs to get done for the week. Can she carpool to some of the extra curriculars? Your tween wants to know you've made the effort for her, and organizing a ride to and from a favorite activity can be that involvement from you she's looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You've set your priorities, and she knows where she falls. I'm also curious to know where the other parent is in this, and why that parent can't do these things for her. After all, if you're working those kinds of hours, you sure as hell had better be sufficiently well compensated to afford a second car so that everyone else in the family isn't held hostage to your work schedule.
This. I hope you start to recognize this.
Scale back the job.
That's what 99% of us did.
If one of us has the "BIG" job (long hours, stress, consistent evening work, and/or travel) the other one scales back to a 9-5.
I live in NW DC and almost everyone I know (about 100 families) has this arrangement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You've set your priorities, and she knows where she falls. I'm also curious to know where the other parent is in this, and why that parent can't do these things for her. After all, if you're working those kinds of hours, you sure as hell had better be sufficiently well compensated to afford a second car so that everyone else in the family isn't held hostage to your work schedule.
This. I hope you start to recognize this.
Anonymous wrote:
Posters here are crazy - OP is saying she works long hours and has difficulty accommodating frivolous requests for last-minutes changes in schedule.
You're all raising spoiled brats if you think OP should bend over backwards to fulfill all these capricious whims.
Anonymous wrote:You've set your priorities, and she knows where she falls. I'm also curious to know where the other parent is in this, and why that parent can't do these things for her. After all, if you're working those kinds of hours, you sure as hell had better be sufficiently well compensated to afford a second car so that everyone else in the family isn't held hostage to your work schedule.