Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting that apparently the dad in question hasn't wanted to do anything with the older child since they were born. Did he even want kids or was this a decision made by the wife?
We can see pages and pages of women complaining that a husband is bugging them for sex but not a peep when a woman keep pestering a man to have a child.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. You people are trashing me but moms are on here constantly talking about leaving their husbands or feeling trapped by husbands who do little or nothing with the kids. You can't change anyone but yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a come to Jesus talk is way past due.
The fact that you have a three year old and never go out with friends for dinner because he "doesn't know how to get the kids to bed" is truly insane.
It's learned helplessness. Tell him you need to go out, and then go out. I'm sure he's smart enough to put the kids to bed.
Yep. You're both to blame because you've enabled this BS by falling for his "it sounds like you're calling me a bad dad just because I'm not doing any parenting at all, how can you be so meeeeeeeean????" routine.
That's literally what he sounds like. How do I respond to that? what do I say to him when he sulks and says that I'm ganging up on him by saying that it would be nice if he did some one on one time with our 3 year old? I've literally been telling him to go out and do that for 3 years now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand this whole thing about he doesn't know how to get the kids to bed. Has he "shadowed you" a few times while you do it? What is so difficult? You should be able to have at least a monthly ladies night out while he takes care of dinner and bedtime routine. I think you are enabling his helplessness.
He has shadowed me. I always tell him that he's free to do his own thing though, that it's my routine but if he feels more comfortable doing his own thing, than he can do it. I don't know if that is causing the problem because than I'm being too wishy-washy and maybe he needs me to spell out exactly what to do and in what order? He will attempt to say, give the kids a bath, but than my youngest will start crying for me or my oldest will say he doesn't a certain book and than my husband will just give up. I'll tell him to just keep doing what he's doing and ignore toddler tantrums but he literally just shrugs his shoulders and says that they want mom and he's not good at this sort of stuff and that I need to take over.
Anonymous wrote:My husband has appeared to have checked out as a parent. He's currently between jobs (independent contractor so his next job doesn't start for a few weeks) and I thought it would be a great opportunity for him to spend some time with our two kids (18m and 3yr) and give me a much needed break to run errands (we are renovating two rooms) without the kids. Instead, he spends all day on his phone and the kids are parked in front of the TV all day. I took my oldest today with me and I thought my husband would at least take my youngest out around the block. Nope, got home 2 hours later and my youngest was in front of the TV while my husband was on his phone in the next room. If I'm not around, nobody gets fed, dressed, or anything else. I have never been able to go to a dinner with friends because my husband doesn't know how to get the kids to bed. If I don't plan out the days, he will literally sit in the house with them for hours waiting for me to say "let's go to the park/play date/zoo/etc." If we go out, he's on his phone, scrolling through Facebook or playing words with friends. He's never taken the kids anywhere by himself. Yesterday he told me that he needed time to go to the gym (he's overweight). I told him to take the boys and go on a jog , he told me he can't focus on working out if the kids are around. We go to the pool and I get stuck with the kids while he goes to do laps. If I say anything to him, he accuses me of trying to make him out to be a bad father and he gets emotional. He's not a bad guy, he provides for our family, he's not mean or anything, he's just not very present. I know his own childhood was basically him being put in front of the TV all day and he says he turned out fine, so I don't know how I can get through to him. Any advice on how to get him more involved with the kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop feeling like the bad guy.
Tell him he's a horrible dad. Get through to him in whatever means necessary, whether it's "how do you want the kids to remember you when they're older--oh wait, they won't because you never did anything with them" or signing him up for parenting classes.
Also tell him this impacts your relationship. Crappy dad does not equal good husband. Suggest marriage counseling, make an appointment, and tell him to show up if he wants to work on it. Otherwise, you have your answer that this will never get any better and either accept it or start looking for a divorce lawyer.
He's not a horrible dad though. He's not abusive, he makes sure our finances are in order, he doesn't yell or get mean or anything of the sort. He does love the kids, I just don't know how to get through to him that his indifference (for lack of a better word) is an issue. And yes, it does affect the marriage, it's hard to be romantic with someone when you're always in mom mode.