Anonymous wrote:I don’t read parenting books or research parenting topics either, and I think letting an 8yo and 5yo entertain themselves is a real gift. I’m not sure when we decided that children needed to be entertained all the time. I’m also a believer that in parenting, with regards to time, it’s not just quality, it’s quantity. Being around is huge. He doesn’t need to make every moment magical. He seems like a very good dad to me and in general my expectations for dads are pretty high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- thanks for the replies. I was expecting some people to come down on me. I had a really special family and fairytale childhood, so I think my standards are too high. To answer some questions from above...
He was not an only child.
His father was absent from his life.
This is about his emotional bonding with his kids and not about sharing the load of household duties.
Perhaps he is a normal guy, as some have expressed, so maybe I should adjust my expectations. My experience with my own father, grandfather and uncles is not that they were just “normal guys” who got a pass from going above and beyond as fathers.
I do not want my husband to be my father. I was comparing his actions to those of my father because that’s my only point of reference for fathering. And my father was a great one. Nothing wrong with that.
I am not a SAHM, but I do put a lot of effort into parenting. I only get them for about 18 years. Why wouldn’t I put my all into it?
You don’t get to dictate this.
+1
You don't get to say how he bonds emotionally with his children. My husband and I do it differently, but we each appreciate that we're doing it in our own ways. Now, if my husband's way of "bonding" was to ignore the kids until they were 18, I'd have an issue with that, but otherwise you need to respect that he's a different person than you are and he's going to do things differently. The run thing was stupid, but if that doesn't happen a lot, then let it go. You should have said something about it in the moment, so be ready if he does something like that again. I have said and done some boneheaded things before and my husband generally let me know that maybe I could think about it a different way and I realized he was right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised by the posts criticizing you. He sounds like a mediocre father to me. It's nice he does the minimum, but I don't think it's asking too much to expect more. I don't think the "traditions" stuff or researching parenting topics is important, but you saying he never seeks out opportunities to do things with the kids suggests he's not very engaged or invested. Leaving him alone with the kids might help.
Like what? Read parenting books? Discipline the same exact way as OP (maybe her DH thinks she is unreasonable in her discipline). And to your other point, the OP listed out a bunch of things that DH is ALREADY doing (bed/bath/sports/feed them) - could he do more? sure! But don't say he's not engaged. GFAFB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- thanks for the replies. I was expecting some people to come down on me. I had a really special family and fairytale childhood, so I think my standards are too high. To answer some questions from above...
He was not an only child.
His father was absent from his life.
This is about his emotional bonding with his kids and not about sharing the load of household duties.
Perhaps he is a normal guy, as some have expressed, so maybe I should adjust my expectations. My experience with my own father, grandfather and uncles is not that they were just “normal guys” who got a pass from going above and beyond as fathers.
I do not want my husband to be my father. I was comparing his actions to those of my father because that’s my only point of reference for fathering. And my father was a great one. Nothing wrong with that.
I am not a SAHM, but I do put a lot of effort into parenting. I only get them for about 18 years. Why wouldn’t I put my all into it?
You don’t get to dictate this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the key is that OP says her husband's father was absent. he likely has unresolved issues relating to that, plus he didn't have the father figure model that many children had. my guess is he doesn't recognize how lacking in the father department he is and figures being physically present is enough. You need to talk to him and don't tell him he's a bad father and don't compare him to your dad. talk from a point of view where you'd like to have more of a partner and you'd like to help him discover the joys of connecting emotionally with his children
Hell no. He is an adult and ought to be allowed to relate to his children as he sees fit. Women who are always trying to mold their husbands and children into supposedly being “better” versions of themselves are just miserable excuses for human beings.
Anonymous wrote:the key is that OP says her husband's father was absent. he likely has unresolved issues relating to that, plus he didn't have the father figure model that many children had. my guess is he doesn't recognize how lacking in the father department he is and figures being physically present is enough. You need to talk to him and don't tell him he's a bad father and don't compare him to your dad. talk from a point of view where you'd like to have more of a partner and you'd like to help him discover the joys of connecting emotionally with his children