Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I got the keys and I am finally home. I got ramen and spent $25 that I didn’t need to. He can’t walk out of the ward but what he could have done was give the keys to security to hand to me. Apparently this is a personal issue for him because it makes him look forgetful and he doesn’t want to look like he’s on his phone. My keys have always been separate because the car keys stay at the bottom of my bag as my car is touch start/open and makes my house keys lighter.
You sound ungrateful and way too high strung. I wouldn't want to ask security to pass my spouse keys so they didn't have a wait a couple of hours either. Why ask a relative stranger for a favor when you can ask your life partner to just chill for a couple of hours? Save your favors for true emergencies, and trust that your adult partner can handle themselves like an adult through a couple of hours of minor inconvenience.
You have $25 for ramen. Did you even bother to taste it? Maybe you should've used this opportunity to practice being present and grateful for what you have instead of such an insufferable tw@ about what you don't.
You'd really leave your family member locked out for hours rather than just hand security the keys? I wouldn't hesitate to give security a key for a family member eve if it was entirely their fault.
Do you guys just not like your families?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he allowed to unlock the unit himself? How big a deal is it for him to leave to deposit keys? I could actually imagine my husband being a bit like this as he's a total work perfectionist and would never want to have to ask his boss for a favor/tell him that he messed something up in a situation like this unless it actually mattered. He'd probably tell me to chill for 2 hours if I had a warm car/place to wait.
Yeah HELL no…
I would be kicking the door down, burning the house down, burning the hospital down, and suffocating first responders with the dryer sheets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless he's in surgery, he's a jerk.
+1
He can recover from this by taking the initiative to install a smartlock, pronto.
And my 15 year old could walk right into your house with no key and not have to pause at your door.
You’re ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is his job there? Is he able to run out at any time or not? Not all hospital positions would allow you to take a random break.
Nurse but he also won’t give them to security so I can get them.
Maybe he doesn't trust anyone at work.
I wouldn't give my key to anyone at work. A bad actor would have enough time to duplicate it before the wife come pick it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is his job there? Is he able to run out at any time or not? Not all hospital positions would allow you to take a random break.
Nurse but he also won’t give them to security so I can get them.
Maybe he doesn't trust anyone at work.
I wouldn't give my key to anyone at work. A bad actor would have enough time to duplicate it before the wife come pick it up.
Anonymous wrote:OP clarified her husband is a nurse in a maternity ward. He was not scrubbed into surgery or stuck in a viral containment unit. He 100 percent could have found a way to get her those keys. Red flag OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is his job there? Is he able to run out at any time or not? Not all hospital positions would allow you to take a random break.
Nurse but he also won’t give them to security so I can get them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I got the keys and I am finally home. I got ramen and spent $25 that I didn’t need to. He can’t walk out of the ward but what he could have done was give the keys to security to hand to me. Apparently this is a personal issue for him because it makes him look forgetful and he doesn’t want to look like he’s on his phone. My keys have always been separate because the car keys stay at the bottom of my bag as my car is touch start/open and makes my house keys lighter.
Keys aside, it’s not your husband’s fault that you CHOSE to spend $25 on ramen. I’m confident you wouldn’t have starved to death.
I have no way to get into my house to make food. Next time I’ll go spear hunting and make a fire.
Anonymous wrote:Is he allowed to unlock the unit himself? How big a deal is it for him to leave to deposit keys? I could actually imagine my husband being a bit like this as he's a total work perfectionist and would never want to have to ask his boss for a favor/tell him that he messed something up in a situation like this unless it actually mattered. He'd probably tell me to chill for 2 hours if I had a warm car/place to wait.