Anonymous wrote:How old is your child? if 1 to 1.5 years speech delayed, I'm imagining at least 2.5 Who puts a 2.5 year old in a playpen? ????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Errands, all appointments, laundry, cleaning, picking up, dinner on the table at 6.
...and all set to rock DW's world in bed when she comes home from a hard day's work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do my own laundry, fix my own meals (microwave something and fix vegetables), and pay half of the bills. I also fix DC's breakfast every morning and get him dressed. On the weekends, I usually spend half a day cleaning (I don't think DH knows where the toilet brush even lives), the place is in a constant state of clutter (none of it mine or DC's), repairs get completed after a few months, and none of the speech therapy ideas get done, but DC watches a lot of TV and spends a lot of time in a playpen.
DH gets groceries about 90% of the time, does the dishes, does his laundry and DC's, does the repairs around the house (eventually), and pays his half of the bills. He also does almost all of the appointments (car repairs, post office, etc.).
I really want him to do more during the day, especially with DC, and would like him to do things without being asked 50 times. I genuinely don't want to be a nag or put too an unfair amount on his plate, but I feel like he puts me in a position where I have no choice. Asking nicely is just ignored.
It sounds like he does a lot of the housework. Caring for a child takes time.
My husband stays at home. U do most of the laundry - because I want to do it my way. He cooks, does dishes, appointments, home repair. I don't dictate to him what his schedule is or how to do dishes. I'm happy he fixes things - even of it takes a few weeks.
A toddler is a handful. They need constant attention. Take a breath and be appreciative of what he does.
I agree with this. Your DH is already doing a lot - it would be great if contributed a little more to dinner prep but I wouldn't focus on that. As kids get older and can entertain themselves more, that will become easier. Let the clutter go. Hire a housecleaner, even 1x/month will make a different. When you are home, parenting and household responsibilities should be 50/50. Focus on encouraging speech therapy and one outing a day for DC - to park, music class, play date, speech therapy etc. How old is DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do my own laundry, fix my own meals (microwave something and fix vegetables), and pay half of the bills. I also fix DC's breakfast every morning and get him dressed. On the weekends, I usually spend half a day cleaning (I don't think DH knows where the toilet brush even lives), the place is in a constant state of clutter (none of it mine or DC's), repairs get completed after a few months, and none of the speech therapy ideas get done, but DC watches a lot of TV and spends a lot of time in a playpen.
DH gets groceries about 90% of the time, does the dishes, does his laundry and DC's, does the repairs around the house (eventually), and pays his half of the bills. He also does almost all of the appointments (car repairs, post office, etc.).
I really want him to do more during the day, especially with DC, and would like him to do things without being asked 50 times. I genuinely don't want to be a nag or put too an unfair amount on his plate, but I feel like he puts me in a position where I have no choice. Asking nicely is just ignored.
It sounds like he does a lot of the housework. Caring for a child takes time.
My husband stays at home. U do most of the laundry - because I want to do it my way. He cooks, does dishes, appointments, home repair. I don't dictate to him what his schedule is or how to do dishes. I'm happy he fixes things - even of it takes a few weeks.
A toddler is a handful. They need constant attention. Take a breath and be appreciative of what he does.
Anonymous wrote:You said he does dishes, most laundry, and most groceries, as well as house repairs and most appointments. That's reasonable. Don't push on that front.
You can't change everything, so focus on one thing. Otherwise it becomes overwhelming, and he just ignores and does what he wants, and you become the "nag." That one thing should the speech therapy. Your son needs to come
first and be the top priority. Push that one issue only, and compliment him on the things he does do.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do my own laundry, fix my own meals (microwave something and fix vegetables), and pay half of the bills. I also fix DC's breakfast every morning and get him dressed. On the weekends, I usually spend half a day cleaning (I don't think DH knows where the toilet brush even lives), the place is in a constant state of clutter (none of it mine or DC's), repairs get completed after a few months, and none of the speech therapy ideas get done, but DC watches a lot of TV and spends a lot of time in a playpen.
DH gets groceries about 90% of the time, does the dishes, does his laundry and DC's, does the repairs around the house (eventually), and pays his half of the bills. He also does almost all of the appointments (car repairs, post office, etc.).
I really want him to do more during the day, especially with DC, and would like him to do things without being asked 50 times. I genuinely don't want to be a nag or put too an unfair amount on his plate, but I feel like he puts me in a position where I have no choice. Asking nicely is just ignored.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do my own laundry, fix my own meals (microwave something and fix vegetables), and pay half of the bills. I also fix DC's breakfast every morning and get him dressed. On the weekends, I usually spend half a day cleaning (I don't think DH knows where the toilet brush even lives), the place is in a constant state of clutter (none of it mine or DC's), repairs get completed after a few months, and none of the speech therapy ideas get done, but DC watches a lot of TV and spends a lot of time in a playpen.
DH gets groceries about 90% of the time, does the dishes, does his laundry and DC's, does the repairs around the house (eventually), and pays his half of the bills. He also does almost all of the appointments (car repairs, post office, etc.).
I really want him to do more during the day, especially with DC, and would like him to do things without being asked 50 times. I genuinely don't want to be a nag or put too an unfair amount on his plate, but I feel like he puts me in a position where I have no choice. Asking nicely is just ignored.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your post it sounds like he is doing what he should be. How do you know how long he is in the playpen? You can't manage your child's day down to the minute. You trusted your husband to be a sahd so just trust him. Maybe dad needs some ideas about what to do with kid during the winter months.
I would agree with this but for the speech delay. How worried are the docs?
I'm not trying to manage the day down to the minute. I know that DC is in the playpen most of the day, because DH has been "about to" put up our new baby gate for about 6 months. Accordingly, DC would fall down the stairs unless someone is running after him, and DH tells me every evening not to put him down outside of his room or playpen. Then, I ask how long he played in his room, and at most, it is 30 minutes or an hour every day. That leaves hours in the playpen. Plus, DH talks about what "they watched" and what video games "they played" while DC was in the playpen.
I think DH is a great dad in that he loves our son and loves "playing" with DC by doing things with him, like TV and games and errands. The concern is that the things he does are not great, especially with a speech delay, and he isn't interested in changing those activities. No books are read that I don't read, no playdates ever unless I do them myself, no outside play during the weekdays, etc.
The docs say DC is 1-1.5 years behind for both expressive and receptive.
So put up the baby gate yourself! WTH?? It's not that hard.
DH would flip out if I did it myself. He "wants" to do stuff but then doesn't do it. If I try to do it myself, he gets defensive.