Anonymous wrote:If it’s important to you, remind him. I don’t care about these made up occasions so I wouldn’t care and wouldn’t be disappointed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a lot of hiking families on a Sunday!
Hilariously, I’m a mother, and I will be hiking, but but doing a long-planeed trip to Shenandoah with my sister.
We hike every Mother's and Father's Day! We live in Colorado, and yes, the trails are crowded that day!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love my husband v much but he's a horrible planner. Cannot think beyond a few days in advance. Should I nudge him to remind him of mother's day to make sure he has a plan or risk waking up on Sunday disapointed when he seemingly will just plan spur of moment? Anyone else going through this?
If you;re going to be disappointed, give him a gentle reminder. Better to ask for what you want if it's really important to you.
As a mom, what is important to me is the message to our kids. Our first Mother’s Day he bought beautiful roses ordered online. I explained to him how much it means to me to have DS learn every year they go out and pick out flowers together, buy something for breakfast, and bring it home to me. The next year I got truly the most ugly daisies ever—these weird fluorescent dyed daisies but I was overjoyed. Now DS is 8 and I overheard him telling DH that he thinks they should buy me a bird feeder this year.
I do the same for Father’s Day, where DS and I pick out a card and he gets to pick a restaurant with me.
Anonymous wrote:My husband got me a Mother's Day gift when I was pregnant with our first. I guess he was really excited. I am superstitious and thought it a bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I nudged my husband but I'm newly pregnant with our first, so he could be forgiven for not thinking to recognize the holiday. What did your DH do last year? Has he dropped the ball on Mother's Day before?
You're not a mother.
Yeah, huge eyeroll here. Of course it would be fine and cute for your husband to celebrate mother's day with you, but the idea that you decided to push him for recognition when you're just newly pregnant? Come on.
Well, congratulations on being a garbage person. We tried for a long time and are very excited to be expecting. He'll get recognition on Father's Day too, and you can continue to be garbage then. Go on.
Not the PP, but the "you don't agree with me so you're garbage" is a bit overplayed these days.
No, telling someone she's not a mother makes you garbage. It's not about agreeing, it's about basic decency.
I have no skin in this particular game, but there is valid reason to disagree on the definition of "mother". Many would argue that you have to give birth. If that's not your definition fine, but it's not an invalid definition.
You can have a different definition for yourself, sure. It's shitty behavior to push it on someone else, especially the way PP did to disparage someone who was clearly excited. I wonder if she tells women whose kids have died that they can't celebrate Mother's Day? Women who've experienced a miscarriage or stillbirth? Be better, people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love my husband v much but he's a horrible planner. Cannot think beyond a few days in advance. Should I nudge him to remind him of mother's day to make sure he has a plan or risk waking up on Sunday disapointed when he seemingly will just plan spur of moment? Anyone else going through this?
If you;re going to be disappointed, give him a gentle reminder. Better to ask for what you want if it's really important to you.
As a mom, what is important to me is the message to our kids. Our first Mother’s Day he bought beautiful roses ordered online. I explained to him how much it means to me to have DS learn every year they go out and pick out flowers together, buy something for breakfast, and bring it home to me. The next year I got truly the most ugly daisies ever—these weird fluorescent dyed daisies but I was overjoyed. Now DS is 8 and I overheard him telling DH that he thinks they should buy me a bird feeder this year.
I do the same for Father’s Day, where DS and I pick out a card and he gets to pick a restaurant with me.
Me too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a lot of hiking families on a Sunday!
Hilariously, I’m a mother, and I will be hiking, but but doing a long-planeed trip to Shenandoah with my sister.
Anonymous wrote:There’s going to be a lot of hiking families on a Sunday!