Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another father here. Anyone in their right mind regrets having kids. It is a relentless nightmare.
I agree that there is not point complaining about it though. You can't push the shit back into the horse, as they say.
Next time he complains just point out that it is only a few more decades before the sweet release of death. Until then he just has to suck it up like the rest of us.
Love it!
But truly, once the kids are older it will be different. My husband had absolutely zero interest in caring for the children when they were small. However, he is the calm and beloved negotiator for them now that they are pre-teens. He really came into his own with them once they were over 5. Men are different, some did not have younger siblings or had too many, and they just don't get into it until the children get more interesting. (Don't flame me - small children have their boring moments!)![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP, what kind of house do you have? How's the neighborhood? We had a house like what it sounds like you have. I truly hated it. There was only one bathroom, and it was on the top floor, meaning that you always had to go upstairs to use it. Upstairs was also where the bedrooms were and hauling a kid up and down those stairs many times a day was physically exausting. The kitchen sucked, no counter space, no place really to put a high-chair, no real place to store extra trays. The backyard and neighborhood sucked. Might it be that DH hates the house, so hates parenting because he is physically and mentally worn out? We moved to a much better house when our daughter was a toddler. I was amazed at the difference in my physical and mental health. I had room to store stuff. I only had to use stairs to do laundry, and we have enough clothes that that could even slip a day. The backyard was awesome. Your "be thankful for what we have" can also be code for "My husband is selfish if he disagrees that our house isn't perfect". Where and how you live make a huge difference. I'm not saying your house is wrong, just telling you my experiences. Your house may have been fine before kids. There is a reason these 1940's houses get remodeled. They simply don't work with today's lifestyle and expectations. And there is nothing wrong with today's expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Another father here. Anyone in their right mind regrets having kids. It is a relentless nightmare.
I agree that there is not point complaining about it though. You can't push the shit back into the horse, as they say.
Next time he complains just point out that it is only a few more decades before the sweet release of death. Until then he just has to suck it up like the rest of us.
Anonymous wrote:After having one child, I realized parenting is not exactly what I thought it would be, and that it affected my ability to live the life I wanted much more than I had thought it would (not in terms of going out and partying, but in terms of having a rewarding career, time to think and read, travel, etc.). I am very happy that I had my son anyway, and love him very much, but it made me realize that one child is enough for me. I feel like with one, I can eventually bounce back and get back some of the other things I enjoy - hey, hopefully my son will enjoy reading and traveling with me one day - but more than one would be waaaay too much for me. If friends ask if I am planning to have another, I am honest about this.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we've all been there (although half the women on this board won't admit it). It gets better. When the youngest is about 3 years old, things will settle down and you guys will start to feel like life is really good. Then you'll decide to have another baby... LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, go over and read the thread about SAHMS giving up great careers. What is going on in your family is why having a SAHM in the family can be a great thing. My DH hated parenting, too, when the kids were little -- we had twins so it was a ton of work and overwhelming. I stayed home after about 9 months. This enabled DH to focus on his career without limits. He was happier, and I have loved raising my own children. Yes, I gave up a fabulous career that I miss (do it part time, but it's not the same), but our family life would have been Hell if I hadn't. I'd think about it if I were you. And if parenting isn't your thing, either -- well, sorry to be snarky, but why on Earth did you have children together?
OP again - I love parenting and I thought DH would too. When we got married (at 24...) we decided we wanted to have kids right away and he was the one who wanted more (I wanted two). Then they actually came and he wants none.
Anonymous wrote:Another father here. Anyone in their right mind regrets having kids. It is a relentless nightmare.
I agree that there is not point complaining about it though. You can't push the shit back into the horse, as they say.
Next time he complains just point out that it is only a few more decades before the sweet release of death. Until then he just has to suck it up like the rest of us.