Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so sad how anti instinctive this society is and how it validates the selfish desires of man children.
You’re ridiculous. It’s not normal to go to bed at 8, have zero alone time with your husband (nor apparently want any. Wtf) and have your child not even need you to co sleep! Like that is batshit. And you want a second child? Please.
Do you also think the mom should bear the brunt of child care? Because you can’t have it both ways. If you want an equal partnership you can’t act like all decisions are unilaterally yours because you are mom
Anonymous wrote:It’s so sad how anti instinctive this society is and how it validates the selfish desires of man children.
Anonymous wrote:The anti- cosleeping is an American thing. I am from another country and co-sleeping is the norm. We still have sex with our husbands, but often don’t sleep together. My DH and I have not slept in the same bed much since our first was born. We have sex plenty(at least 3 times a week) and we have 3 kids. Once the baby stops waking up at night (usually around 2), we will move him with his Sisters so he is not sleeping alone. We always co-slept for as long as our kids wanted/needed it (right around 2/2,5). It not an issue in our relationship at all. I feel horrible for the kids that are left alone to cry. THAT is not acceptable where I come from.
So OP... if the issue is the lack of sex then HAVE sex with your DH before bed... if it’s a better or principle (which I really don’t get), then try to change your husband perspective. Kids are not meant to sleep alone!!!! Why should a grown man not want to sleep alone, but a baby yes?!?! Makes absolutely no sense to me...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP lives here. Sounds like she is American born and raised. Who cares what is the norm somewhere else in the world? It is not just about sex, talking at night, having the plans for the next day, falling asleep, having a partner. Not to mention htat OP admitted that she is doing this for herself.
She needs to ask herself why is she using her 1 year old for emotional support?
Why can’t they do all of that and then go to sleep in separate beds? Personally, when I sleep I sleep... it makes zero difference who is next to me, but if it gives comfort to my young kids, I am very happy to do it. DH is 46... he can sleep on his own
In our case, kids go to bed at 8 and DH and I at 10:30/11:30. We spend 3 hours eating dinner, talking, having sex and watching shows. When we are both about to fall asleep, one of us moves to the baby’s bedroom... I have no clue what is weird or bad about that....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP lives here. Sounds like she is American born and raised. Who cares what is the norm somewhere else in the world? It is not just about sex, talking at night, having the plans for the next day, falling asleep, having a partner. Not to mention htat OP admitted that she is doing this for herself.
She needs to ask herself why is she using her 1 year old for emotional support?
Why can’t they do all of that and then go to sleep in separate beds? Personally, when I sleep I sleep... it makes zero difference who is next to me, but if it gives comfort to my young kids, I am very happy to do it. DH is 46... he can sleep on his own
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP lives here. Sounds like she is American born and raised. Who cares what is the norm somewhere else in the world? It is not just about sex, talking at night, having the plans for the next day, falling asleep, having a partner. Not to mention htat OP admitted that she is doing this for herself.
She needs to ask herself why is she using her 1 year old for emotional support?
Why can’t they do all of that and then go to sleep in separate beds? Personally, when I sleep I sleep... it makes zero difference who is next to me, but if it gives comfort to my young kids, I am very happy to do it. DH is 46... he can sleep on his own
In our case, kids go to bed at 8 and DH and I at 10:30/11:30. We spend 3 hours eating dinner, talking, having sex and watching shows. When we are both about to fall asleep, one of us moves to the baby’s bedroom... I have no clue what is weird or bad about that....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP lives here. Sounds like she is American born and raised. Who cares what is the norm somewhere else in the world? It is not just about sex, talking at night, having the plans for the next day, falling asleep, having a partner. Not to mention htat OP admitted that she is doing this for herself.
She needs to ask herself why is she using her 1 year old for emotional support?
Why can’t they do all of that and then go to sleep in separate beds? Personally, when I sleep I sleep... it makes zero difference who is next to me, but if it gives comfort to my young kids, I am very happy to do it. DH is 46... he can sleep on his own
Anonymous wrote:OP lives here. Sounds like she is American born and raised. Who cares what is the norm somewhere else in the world? It is not just about sex, talking at night, having the plans for the next day, falling asleep, having a partner. Not to mention htat OP admitted that she is doing this for herself.
She needs to ask herself why is she using her 1 year old for emotional support?
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if OP had some undiagnosed post partum anxiety. So much attention is paid to depression and not enough to anxiety. That can lead to behavior like never being alone from the baby.
Anonymous wrote:It's also clearly established that infants in a parent's bed are more likely to die. One NIH study showed 70% of kids who died of SIDS were bedsharing when they died.
My cousin lost her baby boy this way and screams it from the rooftops not to make the same mistake. Bed sharing isn't just bad for you mentally it's dangerous for the baby. There's a reason pediatricians tell you to put the baby in a bassinet or crib. They've seen what happens when bedsharing goes wrong.
Obviously we're talking young babies here, but OP wants a second kid.