Anonymous wrote:I wonder how many of you self righteous women have ever had a moment where after a full day of kids, work, errands, cooking etc hasnt caught herself dozing off in a chair while their child played nearby. Well, one who would admit it. I have. The child was fine. Who says the kid sat in a soaked diaper for long? The child could have just peed the diaper not long before mom returned home. And if mom has to start off by saying something about not being able to trust her husband then she set herself (and her child up) for this failure. She has no business then leaving her husband in charge of the kid. Love it how people can slam someone. Go look at yourselves in the mirror and make sure you dont live in a glass house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't read all the posts but just want to chime in. DH sounds like he really screwed up -- and maybe was really exhausted??
I agree that it would help to "treat him less as a child," as some PPs have said, but he also needs to take responsibility as a parent.
Personally, it sounds to me like DH has to be more involved on an everyday basis, not just when you go out once a month. He needs to be in charge of bedtime a few days a week so he knows what to expect and what to do. It's not okay to just fall asleep and plop the kid in your bed with the TV on. If he tried and tried and tried to get the kid to sleep but he refused, and after 1.5 hours he gave up and let him sit in the parents' bed, I could possibly understand it. But it doesn't sound like that!
My DH helps every single night. He is the one in charge of bedtime. I give a bath and do teeth-brushing, and then DH gets DS in his PJs, reads a book, and puts him to sleep. There is no reason why other fathers can't do this. It's a great chance to be with their children.
Exhausted from his obsession with hunting maybe?
Anonymous wrote:Didn't read all the posts but just want to chime in. DH sounds like he really screwed up -- and maybe was really exhausted??
I agree that it would help to "treat him less as a child," as some PPs have said, but he also needs to take responsibility as a parent.
Personally, it sounds to me like DH has to be more involved on an everyday basis, not just when you go out once a month. He needs to be in charge of bedtime a few days a week so he knows what to expect and what to do. It's not okay to just fall asleep and plop the kid in your bed with the TV on. If he tried and tried and tried to get the kid to sleep but he refused, and after 1.5 hours he gave up and let him sit in the parents' bed, I could possibly understand it. But it doesn't sound like that!
My DH helps every single night. He is the one in charge of bedtime. I give a bath and do teeth-brushing, and then DH gets DS in his PJs, reads a book, and puts him to sleep. There is no reason why other fathers can't do this. It's a great chance to be with their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait one minute. You decided to get pregnant, then you had long discussions about what you expected of him. How much buy-in did you get from him? It sounds as if you set yourself up as the kid expert even before birth.
It's an ass-clown thing to take it out on the kid, but when you treat someone like a child, you often provoke yet more childish behaviour.
Op here. Um, you apparently totally misread my post. HE wanted to have a baby. HE pestered me for a year begging me to get pregnant, during which time I had very frank discussions on what he would need to do if we had a baby, and that i expected hiim to step up, etc. I finally agreed to start trying, and we had our DS. When DS was born, we had been together for 9 years. I've never claimed to be a kid expert. I only expected him to be able to feed DS, brush his teeth, and get him to bed at his bedtime so he wouldn't have a hart timme getting up for daycare in the morning. If it hadn't been a "school night", I wouldn't have cared about him still being up since I wouldn't have to get him up early in the morning. My MIL and FIL have even had discussions with me about what would happen if sommething happened to me. They fear that their own son would not be capable of taking care of DS, and they have told me they would seek custody of him. H's father is barely talking to him right now because of a "parenting fail" incident when he was visiting them in NYC (which I won't bother going into here).
When I talked to him about the other night, he apologized casually, like it was no big deal. I didn't yell, I was very calm about it, but I told him my concerns. His reaction was that I don't appreciate what he goes through to hunt and put meat on his family's table (bs, he hunts because he loves it, not because we need meat. We have too MUCH meat we can't fit it into our 2 freezers). He said I was just trying to cause conflict in our marriage and was being a nagging bitch. He said i have a mental problem where I'm trying to make myself into a martyr. I told him okay, would he go to counseling with me, so maybe I could get a diiagnosis for my mental problems. He got madd and is now no longer speaking to me, and he left to go hunting for the weekend. I'm pretty much to the point that I'm giving up on this marriage if he won't agree to go to counseling with me. (Excuse the typos, I'm typing real quick on my phone, because Im on my way out to take DS to a "touch a truck" think)
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how many of you self righteous women have ever had a moment where after a full day of kids, work, errands, cooking etc hasnt caught herself dozing off in a chair while their child played nearby. Well, one who would admit it. I have. The child was fine. Who says the kid sat in a soaked diaper for long? The child could have just peed the diaper not long before mom returned home. And if mom has to start off by saying something about not being able to trust her husband then she set herself (and her child up) for this failure. She has no business then leaving her husband in charge of the kid. Love it how people can slam someone. Go look at yourselves in the mirror and make sure you dont live in a glass house.
Anonymous wrote:Wait one minute. You decided to get pregnant, then you had long discussions about what you expected of him. How much buy-in did you get from him? It sounds as if you set yourself up as the kid expert even before birth.
It's an ass-clown thing to take it out on the kid, but when you treat someone like a child, you often provoke yet more childish behaviour.
Anonymous wrote:As a husband and father I'd say your husband's behavior was completely out of line.
It's possible that he brought your child to bed anticipating doing all of those things and simply fell asleep. However, the follow on to doing that is to be apologetic and try to resolve the situation - not roll over and act like a Neanderthal ("Me hunt in morning. Wife go away!")