Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And it’s not just making dinner, it’s having an established routine that includes dinner time; making sure that you have pots, pans, dishes, glasses, and flatware, in your home, clean, and ready to use; planning a nutritious meal that appeals to adults and kids with at least one thing the toddler will definitely eat; making sure said meal can be prepared and eaten in the time you have between getting home and sports practice; grocery shopping; and clean-up.
It’s a lot. And it’s nearly impossible to get it all done without thinking about it at least some of the time while I am at work.
That takes effort? I meal plan for every week. I make a list grocery list and DH and I split the list and go grocery shopping on Sunday, sometimes Saturday. I cook dinner Sunday-Wed and Friday. Wednesday is take out night, Thursday is fend for yourself, Saturday is dinner at my parents. DH and kids take care of dishes. Everyone packs lunches before dinner is put away.
Our household runs on auto-pilot 99% of the time. DH and I go to work and come home. Kids go to school and come home. Sometimes kids get sick. Sometimes things come up that we want to do or have to do and require an adjustment in our routine.
I leave home at home and work at work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look I used to have a lot of rage about this- a lot. Then I figured out that I want the control. You can’t have it both- either you do it yourself and control it or you pass it to DH and cede control. In my case, if I cede control, DC would have the iPad all day, chicken nuggets every night, may or may not have childcare, would go to bed at 11 pm... just easier for me to do it bc I need the control.
That’s not control.
That’s about not not neglecting your kid.
There’s a difference.
That you can’t see that is sad.
Anonymous wrote:
And it’s not just making dinner, it’s having an established routine that includes dinner time; making sure that you have pots, pans, dishes, glasses, and flatware, in your home, clean, and ready to use; planning a nutritious meal that appeals to adults and kids with at least one thing the toddler will definitely eat; making sure said meal can be prepared and eaten in the time you have between getting home and sports practice; grocery shopping; and clean-up.
It’s a lot. And it’s nearly impossible to get it all done without thinking about it at least some of the time while I am at work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH does take on full mental load stuff, but he didn't when they were babies/little. I don't know what precipitated the change. It happened gradually when they were about 8 and 10. He started planning the whole summer of childcare and various sleepaway and day camps. He posted the job listings on the local college board, interviewed summer/school year nannies/mannies. Was the POC with them for years of driving logistics, and we had to get a new one nearly every year.
He has done all summer camp research, forms, pede visits, bookings, coordination with other parents for groups of friends to go to the same camp at the same time. For years. It is so amazing.
Now they are teens and we are in 2 busy carpools, one for school one for soccer. He handles ALL the annoying text exchanges for those - 6 families and all their changes and week to week random needs. It is so great.
I have no idea why or how. I just feel grateful.
Now they are 14 and 16 and he does SO much more than I do.
Hmm this is quite the transformation. Please delve deep into your thoughts and let us know how this came about! I cannot even see my husband researching summer camps. He does other stuff but not carpools and interacting with other school parents - that is all on me so far.
Per your request I did some deep thinking about this. I think it was several things that brought the change about, but one major thing: soccer. my DH cares deeply about soccer and got both our kids into it at 4 years old. They both proved good at it but especially one of them. As that child progressed through the soccer machine, the needs were complex, year round and never ending and I just did not care at all. DH had to step up to make sure the special coaching camp was booked, the end of year coaches meetings and parent info sessions were attended, the birth certificates were scanned and emailed, on and on.
Not to mention the yearly multi-family carpool logistics. Oh we are going to host British soccer coaches in our house? wow, ok. Oh you are going to coach both kids teams this year (when they were little)? Ok. Oh you are taking them to see pro soccer and Beckham in person? Ok. Oh we are all going to watch premier league soccer (I do love the game too thank goodness) and you and DC will have fantasy teams? ok. He has total ownership. Also there have been health clearances needed each year as well as injuries including doctor and hospital visits. He handles all the booking and driving for those appointments and that kind of morphed into dentist, orthodontist and all other appointments. The soccer camp research and booking morphed into all other camp bookings. When they were infants and toddlers he was much more disengaged.
Anonymous wrote:Curious who handles all the bills and finances of the household? In most I know it’s the dads, is that typical?
Anonymous wrote:I’m the immediate PP. I’ll also add, that oftentimes the things that we have to do may not fall neatly into a little list that I can just give to DH. Sometimes things require some deeper analysis and consideration and I’m just not sure what we should do. I bear these burdens alone. DH only responds to neat little projects with a beginning, middle and end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH does take on full mental load stuff, but he didn't when they were babies/little. I don't know what precipitated the change. It happened gradually when they were about 8 and 10. He started planning the whole summer of childcare and various sleepaway and day camps. He posted the job listings on the local college board, interviewed summer/school year nannies/mannies. Was the POC with them for years of driving logistics, and we had to get a new one nearly every year.
He has done all summer camp research, forms, pede visits, bookings, coordination with other parents for groups of friends to go to the same camp at the same time. For years. It is so amazing.
Now they are teens and we are in 2 busy carpools, one for school one for soccer. He handles ALL the annoying text exchanges for those - 6 families and all their changes and week to week random needs. It is so great.
I have no idea why or how. I just feel grateful.
Now they are 14 and 16 and he does SO much more than I do.
Hmm this is quite the transformation. Please delve deep into your thoughts and let us know how this came about! I cannot even see my husband researching summer camps. He does other stuff but not carpools and interacting with other school parents - that is all on me so far.
Anonymous wrote:I handle probably 80-90% of the child-related tasks. Some are by choice (buying clothes) and some are because DH doesn't want to do it/won't do it and some are because it is important to me.
One thing that has worked for us is me delegating the things that he DOES care about (i care too) to him. Such as dental appointments. He is responsible for scheduling them, canceling transportation to school/daycare, and calling to let school/daycare know the kids will be late or picked up early. In the begining he would schedule and take them but i did all of the front end stuff like making phone calls. Not anymore. I told him that is part of the task. So he does it.
I find if i give him something HE Is in charge of with NO input from me, it goes much better. If DS has 3 birthday parties, i will give DH 1 of them that is his to figure out. RSVPing, shopping for the gift, drop off/pick up etc. He has really liked this aspect because he is not much of a shopper typically but loves taking DS to look for gifts for the party. It has been a great bonding experience and i take NO part in it, don't comment on the gift choice or how the gift is wrapped. I don't pick out a card or make sure anything is done. He does it.
This has helped us so much. He hated doing tasks where he felt i would micromanage him (and i likely was) and i hated having to micromanage him (felt i had to). When i gave him some autnomy he really excelled.
Now, he is a good dad and DH to start so that likely has some to do with it.
I don't get guys who run major departments and oversee dozens of staff but claim they can't handle taking their own kid to a party or getting him to a littl league game on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious who handles all the bills and finances of the household? In most I know it’s the dads, is that typical?
As we close in on the year 2020, there really shouldn't be that many bills to handle. You can pay for most things on credit cards and then autopay the full balance every month (obviously the cardholder should be looking through periodically to make sure the expenses are valid). Mortgage payments, utilities, etc. can be automated as well. Handling the overall financial picture is not something that requires day to day input either. Maybe once/quarter or so. In my family, that's done by the mom because it is related to my professional training and experience.
Sure you can automate paying utilities. But there's still work in setting it up, monitoring it, budgeting, assessing one-time purchases, changes as family finances change, etc etc etc. It was never just about opening the envelope and writing the checks.
Maybe it's because I'm a financial professional who does things like mock up my tax return at the end of the year to make sure we've paid in enough well before filing time - but none of these sound particularly time consuming or onerous. Again, I'm the mom.
Camp registration is just once a year, and while it is a busy season is probably on par to doing taxes and all the bills and account management.
We have many bills that we can’t automate (SACC, electric bill) and someone should still login every month and confirm nothing fishy. So it’s on a schedule and detail orientated similar to other mental load items, but I thought most DH manage it — but I guess not?
Anonymous wrote:Look I used to have a lot of rage about this- a lot. Then I figured out that I want the control. You can’t have it both- either you do it yourself and control it or you pass it to DH and cede control. In my case, if I cede control, DC would have the iPad all day, chicken nuggets every night, may or may not have childcare, would go to bed at 11 pm... just easier for me to do it bc I need the control.