Anonymous wrote:I think you have few options
-He gets a big job, works the long hours and makes enough money for you to stay at home (300k? since you're already making 270k)
-You hire a nanny instead of daycare.
-He pushes back on work. There's no reason he can't leave at 4:30 or 5. If he gets in at 7, that's a 9.5 or 10 hour day! If he won't do that, he needs to do kid drop off. He can workout on his lunch hour.
Men often use work as an excuse to not be home during the worst hours of the day with kids: 5-7pm. Everyone knows those are the hard hours and it's a lot to get dinner on the table while they scream when there's only one parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s putting too much on you. Tell him you will have to go part time if he doesn’t do x , y, and z and he specific.
He's not putting too much on her. His job is a more-than-40-hours a week job, and so he physically cannot be there for mornings and the immediate after school tasks. That's not dumping stuff on her. That's just the realities of a job that is paying 2/3 of their household costs.
If she finds doing the morning and after-aftercare routine by herself is too hard, she needs to outsource some of it. That's an easy solution.
But shes doing more than 2/3 of childcare and household responsibilities so hes still getting the easy side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It gets better as they get older. Can you afford extra help in the mornings or afternoons? I served very simple meals when the kids were little and joined a carpool when they hit elementary.
NP. Disagree. It is much harder when they start doing extracurricular activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in your position and it turned out my now ex was fully exploiting me and taking advantage of my obvious and understandable distraction. But it was all my fault of course!
Then he cheated and I divorced him. Not what he wanted or expected.
This current situation is full of red flags. Start looking at your finances now.
Oh stop. There are no red flags, just the reality of two working parents including one in finance.
I suggest paring back on everything, no activities. After school nanny instead of after care. Plus, perhaps you can look for a new job OP.
I totally disagree. All jumped out at me:
Guy is making $160K and doing no drop off, no pick up, and no dinner. Unless he’s on a strict upward trajectory in finance and this is only temporary, he’s not making enough money to justify being this checked out.
He still prioritizes workers while OP is drowning.
His response to all this is to say he “regrets having kids”.
None of this is good.
Talking about regrets, all-or-nothing attitude, rigidity, refusal to problem-solves, are hallmarks of depression. As is being really self-focused.
He needs to accept that he doesn't earn enough money to behave like this. It's hard for some men to wrap their heads around that disappointment, but it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s putting too much on you. Tell him you will have to go part time if he doesn’t do x , y, and z and he specific.
He's not putting too much on her. His job is a more-than-40-hours a week job, and so he physically cannot be there for mornings and the immediate after school tasks. That's not dumping stuff on her. That's just the realities of a job that is paying 2/3 of their household costs.
If she finds doing the morning and after-aftercare routine by herself is too hard, she needs to outsource some of it. That's an easy solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine is a partner in big law. When his kids were young, he had a hard stop in the office at 5pm. From 5-8pm, he was unavailable. He would get online at 8pm and finish whatever work he needed to do. He clearly communicated his boundaries, people understood and respected them.
It's unfortunate this isn't the norm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It gets better as they get older. Can you afford extra help in the mornings or afternoons? I served very simple meals when the kids were little and joined a carpool when they hit elementary.
I disagree. Daycare years are the best it will ever be. Schools are always closing, out of session and have short hours.
You can't just kick the can down the road.
+1 little kid years are the easiest
They are the easiest in terms of logistics and routine but also the most boring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It gets better as they get older. Can you afford extra help in the mornings or afternoons? I served very simple meals when the kids were little and joined a carpool when they hit elementary.
I disagree. Daycare years are the best it will ever be. Schools are always closing, out of session and have short hours.
You can't just kick the can down the road.
+1 little kid years are the easiest
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It gets better as they get older. Can you afford extra help in the mornings or afternoons? I served very simple meals when the kids were little and joined a carpool when they hit elementary.
I disagree. Daycare years are the best it will ever be. Schools are always closing, out of session and have short hours.
You can't just kick the can down the road.
Anonymous wrote:It gets better as they get older. Can you afford extra help in the mornings or afternoons? I served very simple meals when the kids were little and joined a carpool when they hit elementary.