Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't overfill your own plate. Usually it's better to get schooling out of the way before kids, or wait til the kids are older to go back to school.
I agree.
Before you focus on anything else, you need to get your house in order, OP.
Your nanny needs to step up. Your child needs to have a routine with predictable sleep/wake times, and your husband should be your teammate.
Frankly, I understand why he doesn’t want to be there. It doesn’t sound like you want to be with him as his wife, but that you want to use him as a nanny/housekeeper so that you can study.
Anonymous wrote:Don't overfill your own plate. Usually it's better to get schooling out of the way before kids, or wait til the kids are older to go back to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not. You married the wrong man. You have a husband problem, not a societal problem.
My husband would never do this. He wouldn't want to, first of all, but even if he did, I would put a stop to it pronto.
I bet for each one wife saying her husband would never do this, there are five who feel like OP, plus a couple more whose husbands are like OP's but they don't even know it's wrong, because patriarchy.
F**k the patriarchy.
Damn straight!
And all the women claiming that you’re the loser for marrying a loser are just as much tools of the patriarchy as the legions of crappy husbands. Bye Serena!
So anyway, of course all husbands are *capable* of being selfish assholes. So am I! I am *capable* of it. Do I act like that 99% of the time? No way. Am I literally capable? Yeah.
I'm woman enough to admit that sometimes I lean on my husband even when I don't particularly need the help. There are whole days when he does more than I do, and not even for some noble reason like I'm sick or have a busy work days. But overall, we have balance.
I am so very sorry you married a dud. But it's just not true that most husbands/fathers are like that. If you're a low-value woman who had to settle for a loser, I am sorry about that. But that's just not everyone's reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I do agree that women face disproportionate burdens at home and with kids, this is not a normal situation. Your DH is being a jerk.
This.
Take your weekend and your DH will have to figure it out an your son will eventually fall asleep. Make it a long one.Anonymous wrote:My husband and I earn the same amount - before anyone starts to say I am a SAHM or some BS. I work full-time as a nurse manager in a hospital and am also going to school to complete my MSN.
I've had it with my husbands fishing and hunting trips. He has gone on 4 in the past 2 months. He is only home every other weekend. I am so tired. He left the garbage bins at the end of our driveway when he normally brings them in. He left me a completely overflowing garbage in the morning he left and full dishwasher (normally his job!)- when our nanny came in she so helpfully pointed out to me that these two things needed to be done. Which I did, right before I was trying to leave for work.
I have been chasing our toddler the entire weekend, studying until 11:30PM at night. I had a sitter come this morning from 8-12. My son was up at 6. I am exhausted. I haven't had a chance to shower. My son, of course, falls asleep at 10. Sleeps for half the time the sitter is here. I will be chasing him all afternoon and won't be able to get the rest of the homework that I planned on doing, or tidying up the house or getting anything done. When my husband is coming home later this evening from his FOURTH weekend away in two short months.
WHY is the burden always on me? Why is my husband so completely useless? He can never decide what to make for dinner - it's always "pizza", when I ask him what he wants. He is a 12 year old boy. Sure, I will take care of our son without any breaks, every other weekend, keep the house clean, make sure there's groceries in the fridge and the sitter and housekeeper are paid and happy.
Then my husband will inevitably come home and complain that I spent too much money on online shopping (which is my ONLY vice) - when he just spent around $400 on new gear and various crap for his stupid hunting trips.
I need a weekend alone in an isolated cabin. Except our son will not go down at night with my husband.
I now get why some parents just want to run away. The overwhelming responsibility of my job, school, my son, and cleaning up my husbands inadequacies in his absence are exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I do agree that women face disproportionate burdens at home and with kids, this is not a normal situation. Your DH is being a jerk.
This.
You need to schedule one weekend away for every weekend that he has away. Seriously. Your son will get used to his dad doing bedtime. You HAVE to do this. Go to a cabin with a bad WiFi signal and say you have to study — I bet you actually do need a weekend a line to catch up on school!!! Do it! Please!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a surrendered wife but you've taken it too far.
At bedtime. One day when he is home. Leave. Jyst leave. Don't give him time to protest. You need to run out. You'll come back 2 hours later. He will have survived. Make it a habit
Yep, leave as many times as it takes your kid to learn how to fall asleep without you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because....the patriarchy. However, he sounds below average even for typical dad curve. My DH would never pull that crap. I’m stuck with most household tasks but he does his fair share of kid work.
Huh? My husband doesn't act like this. Not while we were dating, engaged, first married, or now that we have kids.
Gee, you think the same loser who didn't do his fair share or take responsibility while you were just dating will miraculously change? Or did you accept, work around, justify, ignore because you wanted a ring and a baby bump?
Don't blame The Patriarchtph because you married a did. My husband isn't perfect, but he's an equal partner. The same can be said for 85% of the husbands and dads I know. And for the other 15%, we all saw from the start that you picked a loser. We grimaced, glanced aside and hoped you would wise up. Too bad you didn't.