Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
I would bet both of these responses came from men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
NP, same issues. What you posters don't understand is that OP is not seeking permission to do an activity. She's trying to make plans for the family. If she takes the older kid to the park, will DH watch the baby? If not, she needs to prep both kids for the park. My husband does this ALL.THE.TIME. because he'd rather me handle all the parenting work.
So OP could decide for herself that she'll go to the park with the two kids (bc DH isn't communicating his own plans) and then she has to do all of the work and DH gets a few hours to himself.
This adds up too - so if the DW ends up making all the decisions (bc DH won't communicate), then DW is cast as a controlling harpy that won't let her DH have a say in anything.
Ugh this thread is hitting too close to home.
We understand. This is when OP waltzes out with the older kid and tells DH that she and Larlo will be back in an hour. Larla is upstairs napping and he needs to get the chicken in the oven while they are gone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
NP, same issues. What you posters don't understand is that OP is not seeking permission to do an activity. She's trying to make plans for the family. If she takes the older kid to the park, will DH watch the baby? If not, she needs to prep both kids for the park. My husband does this ALL.THE.TIME. because he'd rather me handle all the parenting work.
So OP could decide for herself that she'll go to the park with the two kids (bc DH isn't communicating his own plans) and then she has to do all of the work and DH gets a few hours to himself.
This adds up too - so if the DW ends up making all the decisions (bc DH won't communicate), then DW is cast as a controlling harpy that won't let her DH have a say in anything.
Ugh this thread is hitting too close to home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
NP, same issues. What you posters don't understand is that OP is not seeking permission to do an activity. She's trying to make plans for the family. If she takes the older kid to the park, will DH watch the baby? If not, she needs to prep both kids for the park. My husband does this ALL.THE.TIME. because he'd rather me handle all the parenting work.
So OP could decide for herself that she'll go to the park with the two kids (bc DH isn't communicating his own plans) and then she has to do all of the work and DH gets a few hours to himself.
This adds up too - so if the DW ends up making all the decisions (bc DH won't communicate), then DW is cast as a controlling harpy that won't let her DH have a say in anything.
Ugh this thread is hitting too close to home.
We understand. This is when OP waltzes out with the older kid and tells DH that she and Larlo will be back in an hour. Larla is upstairs napping and he needs to get the chicken in the oven while they are gone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
NP, same issues. What you posters don't understand is that OP is not seeking permission to do an activity. She's trying to make plans for the family. If she takes the older kid to the park, will DH watch the baby? If not, she needs to prep both kids for the park. My husband does this ALL.THE.TIME. because he'd rather me handle all the parenting work.
So OP could decide for herself that she'll go to the park with the two kids (bc DH isn't communicating his own plans) and then she has to do all of the work and DH gets a few hours to himself.
This adds up too - so if the DW ends up making all the decisions (bc DH won't communicate), then DW is cast as a controlling harpy that won't let her DH have a say in anything.
Ugh this thread is hitting too close to home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
Op here. We have a baby (10 weeks old) and a toddler. My decisions affect him. If I left with toddler he’d have to watch the baby and figure out dinner. If he came with us then we would have grabbed dinner out together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
This is what I was thinking. Why can't you just make a decision? You're an adult with a marriage and child but you can't decide if there's time to go to the park or not? COME ON! You sound indecisive and naggy. I wouldn't want to answer you either. JUST DECIDE.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking if you should go to the park? Did you want him to come with you? Just make a decision and leave.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is like this diagnosis is ADD Inattentive and Expressive Language Disorder.
Partial solutions - touch his arm or say his name and make sure you have hos attention before you speak. Sometimes I have to physically go over and stand in front of him to get his attention.
Don’t bury the message in a lot of info or pleasantries, make you question short and simple. Don’t repeat a ton of times. Ask once when you have his attention, then carry on even if
he doesn’t respond.
Stop being angry and allowing it to affect your self-esteem. This is a him problem. When he doesn’t answer he misses out. If he gets angry about it, just state that you asked him and he didn’t respond so you moved on. It’s not your job to repeat yourself 40x a day.