Anonymous wrote:Being home all day with a child, especially very young, is exhausting in a very different way than being at work. You literally feel like you can’t have a thought in your own head or a moment in space and time all to yourself. It’s great in some respects, but incredibly isolating and mind numbing in others, especially with so many things being closed or limited during COVID. A phone is a super easy, portable escape to a world where you’re not wiping noses and butts, and making endless snacks, wiping up the same mess you just cleaned up, etc.
She may not realize how addicted to it she is, but it’s a cumulative effect of her current state of mind. If you can, encourage her to completely disengage form the house at least once a day - get out for a walk alone, or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You want to control your wife. Why?
DP. Because she’s on her phone every waking minute if the day.. 10 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being home all day with a child, especially very young, is exhausting in a very different way than being at work. You literally feel like you can’t have a thought in your own head or a moment in space and time all to yourself. It’s great in some respects, but incredibly isolating and mind numbing in others, especially with so many things being closed or limited during COVID. A phone is a super easy, portable escape to a world where you’re not wiping noses and butts, and making endless snacks, wiping up the same mess you just cleaned up, etc.
As a SAHM with two very young children, I appreciate PP writing this! I do literally feel like I can't have my own thoughts. The phone is an escape.
I would also recommend giving her a block of time to herself: "I'll watch the kids so you can go for a walk," etc.
Anonymous wrote:Being home all day with a child, especially very young, is exhausting in a very different way than being at work. You literally feel like you can’t have a thought in your own head or a moment in space and time all to yourself. It’s great in some respects, but incredibly isolating and mind numbing in others, especially with so many things being closed or limited during COVID. A phone is a super easy, portable escape to a world where you’re not wiping noses and butts, and making endless snacks, wiping up the same mess you just cleaned up, etc.
She may not realize how addicted to it she is, but it’s a cumulative effect of her current state of mind. If you can, encourage her to completely disengage form the house at least once a day - get out for a walk alone, or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs a 40+ hour a week job. A real job.
Yes, because we all know that cures all problems.
My friends that work full time are on their phones constantly.
They are the first to respond to texts or emails!
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like she’s trying to escape her life because she’s unhappy. You might get further approaching her with empathy and compassion than with demands and judgment.