Anonymous wrote:Stress muddies, but also clarifies relationships. Your husband is now more fully aware of who he married. Threats of divorce poison a marriage and are never forgotten. He will not forget. Someday you will need his understanding and forgiveness. Do update us when that happens.
Anonymous wrote:[img]Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t seem like you see him as a partner. It seems like you think he should work for you 24/7 and you are mad he isn’t doing what you tell him to do. Your schedule includes all evening off every day for you to have downtime but no downtime for him.
You don’t throw around divorce as a control tool.
Having a baby is a big adjustment and you have to let go of being controlling and giving orders and instead talk and discuss and hear both points of view. You have to see yourselves as a team. You have to listen. You seem to be approaching this as though you are his boss and he is your employee.
You didn’t understand any of the post. They were a team and had a game plan. Her DH decided he wasn’t willing to do any of it now that he’s back at work. Op does the entire week all by herself with a measly couple of hours break on the weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you described is not divorce-worthy.
My husband travels a decent amount for work and has business dinners several nights a week. He is gone 1-2 weeks out of the month.
Our agreement:
- He would be caring for our baby on the evenings he is home to allow me to have downtime.
He has refused to do any evening help with the baby because he needs to relax.
- He will cook the days he gets home early.
He has refused to cook on the days he is home.
- He will help out at night on the weekends and help me prepare for the week ahead ( meal prep, laundry, grocery shopping..)
He hasn’t done any nights. He does do meal prep and laundry but I’ve had to order groceries because he was too tired.
- He would skip client dinners that aren’t necessary or any travel that isn’t necessary.
He has several next week and will be out of town for work the week after.
The idea of being a SAHM or working part-time has been on the table but it’s not a decision I wanted to make until my maternity leave was nearing an end. I don’t see myself staying home but working part-time is a strong possibility.
It feels to me that I’m parenting by myself. He has no interest in being a husband or father. My life has changed but his is still normal.
Yikes! You need to divorce as well… Wait Is he suffering from post partum too???
Your husband is wayyyyy too comfy w skipping out on tasks he’s not interested in.
Last week he went out to dinner and I about cried when he was boasting about how good it felt to be out and the wine and amazing steak dinner. Here I am home with our child who is so fussy in the evenings I can barely eat dinner or put him down but F that I need help.
Are you breastfeeding? If not, bro can feed the kid while you go out one night a week, even if it's just to the library for some quiet, or a rec class for a hobby, or a cafe or restaurant for a meal you don't have to cook or clean up after.
The baby will grow. The days crawl but the months and years will FLY. Try to stay grounded and be present for your kid, and also know that they'll be okay. They can cry a little. They can wait in their crib while you take a shower/piss by yourself. It doesn't have to be perfect. If you're both alive at the end of the day and the house isn't on fire, you won the day.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t seem like you see him as a partner. It seems like you think he should work for you 24/7 and you are mad he isn’t doing what you tell him to do. Your schedule includes all evening off every day for you to have downtime but no downtime for him.
You don’t throw around divorce as a control tool.
Having a baby is a big adjustment and you have to let go of being controlling and giving orders and instead talk and discuss and hear both points of view. You have to see yourselves as a team. You have to listen. You seem to be approaching this as though you are his boss and he is your employee.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t seem like you see him as a partner. It seems like you think he should work for you 24/7 and you are mad he isn’t doing what you tell him to do. Your schedule includes all evening off every day for you to have downtime but no downtime for him.
You don’t throw around divorce as a control tool.
Having a baby is a big adjustment and you have to let go of being controlling and giving orders and instead talk and discuss and hear both points of view. You have to see yourselves as a team. You have to listen. You seem to be approaching this as though you are his boss and he is your employee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you described is not divorce-worthy.
My husband travels a decent amount for work and has business dinners several nights a week. He is gone 1-2 weeks out of the month.
Our agreement:
- He would be caring for our baby on the evenings he is home to allow me to have downtime.
He has refused to do any evening help with the baby because he needs to relax.
- He will cook the days he gets home early.
He has refused to cook on the days he is home.
- He will help out at night on the weekends and help me prepare for the week ahead ( meal prep, laundry, grocery shopping..)
He hasn’t done any nights. He does do meal prep and laundry but I’ve had to order groceries because he was too tired.
- He would skip client dinners that aren’t necessary or any travel that isn’t necessary.
He has several next week and will be out of town for work the week after.
The idea of being a SAHM or working part-time has been on the table but it’s not a decision I wanted to make until my maternity leave was nearing an end. I don’t see myself staying home but working part-time is a strong possibility.
It feels to me that I’m parenting by myself. He has no interest in being a husband or father. My life has changed but his is still normal.
Yikes! You need to divorce as well… Wait Is he suffering from post partum too???
Your husband is wayyyyy too comfy w skipping out on tasks he’s not interested in.
Last week he went out to dinner and I about cried when he was boasting about how good it felt to be out and the wine and amazing steak dinner. Here I am home with our child who is so fussy in the evenings I can barely eat dinner or put him down but F that I need help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re off your rocker. Call your OB and get in to be seen.
Will OBs prescribe psych meds?
I don’t need psych meds.
I need a husband who actually wants to be a true partner and father.
How much of this was he doing before the baby? Because if you expected a baby to change him into "a true partner and father" well... that's your L.
Was he regularly making meals for both of you? Doing housework? Shopping and minding the household business? Because if not, your expectations are crazy. If so, you might have a chance. If not, well, you knew how he was before you had a kid with the guy, yeah?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re off your rocker. Call your OB and get in to be seen.
Will OBs prescribe psych meds?
I don’t need psych meds.
I need a husband who actually wants to be a true partner and father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you planned before the baby came was probably well intended but naive.
Then reality of him working, you home, each with different timing and stresses hit. Your little plan didn't work.
Time to draw on experiences and revise the plan. Throw money at some problems. If he can't do chores and be good at work and keep the salary and benefits coming in, outsource some stuff and reallocate who does what. If you are too overwhelmed with baby and physical recovery get some hired hands to do stuff and reallocate who does what.
If you divorce you will have fewer resources and it's biting off your nose to spite your face.
I feel like I’m doing it all. No help. We should be doing it as a team. I know it won’t always be 50/50 but I shouldn’t have to assume all of the parenting because he’s too tired after work. I’m tired but I manage to care for our child who eats every dang 1.5-2 hours around the clock, care for myself, and still cook dinner on the days he isn’t home because he won’t do it. I keep on top of the laundry and all the other things that need to be done because it needs to be done. I feel like I’m parenting solo and that was never the plan.
whish is it OP is he doing the cooking or laund or are you. you've ranged you story only 2 pages in....
I explained it pretty easily.
He does his own laundry. I do the rest.
He cooks like mela prep on the weekend but he doesn’t cook during the week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you planned before the baby came was probably well intended but naive.
Then reality of him working, you home, each with different timing and stresses hit. Your little plan didn't work.
Time to draw on experiences and revise the plan. Throw money at some problems. If he can't do chores and be good at work and keep the salary and benefits coming in, outsource some stuff and reallocate who does what. If you are too overwhelmed with baby and physical recovery get some hired hands to do stuff and reallocate who does what.
If you divorce you will have fewer resources and it's biting off your nose to spite your face.
I feel like I’m doing it all. No help. We should be doing it as a team. I know it won’t always be 50/50 but I shouldn’t have to assume all of the parenting because he’s too tired after work. I’m tired but I manage to care for our child who eats every dang 1.5-2 hours around the clock, care for myself, and still cook dinner on the days he isn’t home because he won’t do it. I keep on top of the laundry and all the other things that need to be done because it needs to be done. I feel like I’m parenting solo and that was never the plan.