Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you give some examples? I’m trying to understand. Is it like you teach him to play uno and then your DH plays with him all the time? Then you teach him checkers and DH starts playing that with him? What if you go back to playing uno? Or all play together? Or is it they make pancakes every Sunday when it used to be you?
Why don’t you talk to your husband and say you feel jealous of their pancake time and want to do make your own pizza night on fridays as a bonding activity? If your husband says no to that then you can go from there.
This is basically it. And it is like this for EVERYTHING. And then DS only wants to play Uno or make pancakes with DH. And if I say let’s do pizza on Friday DS says no I want to make pancakes with daddy. DS is preschooler so he is just being young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you give some examples? I’m trying to understand. Is it like you teach him to play uno and then your DH plays with him all the time? Then you teach him checkers and DH starts playing that with him? What if you go back to playing uno? Or all play together? Or is it they make pancakes every Sunday when it used to be you?
Why don’t you talk to your husband and say you feel jealous of their pancake time and want to do make your own pizza night on fridays as a bonding activity? If your husband says no to that then you can go from there.
This is basically it. And it is like this for EVERYTHING. And then DS only wants to play Uno or make pancakes with DH. And if I say let’s do pizza on Friday DS says no I want to make pancakes with daddy. DS is preschooler so he is just being young.
Anonymous wrote:Can you give some examples? I’m trying to understand. Is it like you teach him to play uno and then your DH plays with him all the time? Then you teach him checkers and DH starts playing that with him? What if you go back to playing uno? Or all play together? Or is it they make pancakes every Sunday when it used to be you?
Why don’t you talk to your husband and say you feel jealous of their pancake time and want to do make your own pizza night on fridays as a bonding activity? If your husband says no to that then you can go from there.
Anonymous wrote:OP are you feeling left out? It kinda sounds like it. Join in, let go, and have fun. It can be hard if you're spirits and/or mood are low, but you'll feel better for it. Or - go for a walk or do something that is just_for_YOU. Any chance DH is trying to help you?
My DH and DS have things that are "their thing", for sure -- e.g., video games, running, etc. -- and are things that I don't enjoy. DS and I have things that are our thing -- e.g., cooking, playing tennis. And then there are things that are just things - nothing more. Either of us read, play board games, watch movies, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Ha! I effing WISH! my husband would do this.
Anonymous wrote:DH did this too. Mine is on the spectrum, is yours? I think it does he really cares about DC and wants to try. It also shows good admiration for me as a parent and his appreciation that I find cool things to do with DC. Plus, that way I know he's being safe because the last time he came up with a way to play with her, they were out in the middle of the street, ugh!
Anonymous wrote:My husband drives me crazy. Anything - anything- I do with my kid he watches and then rushes to do it with DC before me the next time. From books to meals to games to ideas. He does it and does it frequently with the kid to where the kid thinks it’s “their thing”. I’m not even sure I can explain it right but it is crazy. I feel like he has no imagination and just takes over every idea I have. Has anyone else experienced this?