Anonymous wrote:OP here. It’s nothing nefarious he’s just a workaholic. I often feel like I’m being gaslight that it’s a totally normal time for someone to work until and that it’s totally normal to just assume your spouse will make dinner and drive your children wherever they need to go.
I don’t see 7pm being an issue if it was already worked into agreed upon responsibilities. What have you discussed as each of your responsibilities in regard to dinner and driving the kids places? My DH was always on an early schedule from when we first met and liked getting in early to avoid traffic and leaving by 3:30-4. So he had dinner and school/aftercare pickup and I had getting the kids out in the morning. Any kid activities had to be agreed upon by both of us that we could commit to the logistics with our work schedule. Often that meant DH was on activity drop off and I had to be on activity pickup (meaning a firm work cutoff time) and I helped organize carpools. Since my work schedule was on the later end, it did come down to eating dinner with the family or not. I found it was easier to have days I planned to work later and get dinner on my own than trying to get everything done in 8 hours of work plus commute when I wasn’t starting work until 8:30am.
If your DH has agreed on certain things and work always seems to supersede, that’s a different issue. I think I read somewhere the advice that your family should be just as important as a work client. From that lens, he should be communicating and balancing. You can’t do everything to meet a deadline for one client and drop the ball and not communicate, or negotiate timelines with the other client. If a true work emergency has come up, he has to figure out what absolutely needs to be done I.e. what needs to be done before he leaves work and if there is any way to work around kid activities like work in the car/location while waiting or logging on later in the evening. Otherwise if he can’t cover what he agreed to do, he needs to ask you to cover and should be negotiating to offer something is exchange, like getting the kids out the next morning or taking over something you would do one the weekend.