by Furzedown Dad » Mon Jul 28, 2014 12:03 pm
Difficult one. Just finished typing the below and it's a little on the rambling side, but thought I would leave it as is.
If he plays sports twice a week after work, I'm inclined to say that you are not being unreasonable.
The way I (as a father of two young ones myself) see it, there are 5 weeknights and 2 full days over the weekend when I "should" be helping with the kids. Any time I do something fun for myself in those periods like going out for a drink with friends after work is great, but I suppose I think of it a bit like my wife doing me a favour rather than something I'm entitled to.
The trouble is if you start thinking along the lines of exchanging kid-free time - e.g. he goes and plays football for half of Saturday and then you go and do your own thing for half a day. Realistically that's not practical as you would spend too little time with both parents present.
So I think there has to be give and take. Most weekend football kicks off at 10:30 or so - perhaps he gives you a lie in, gives the kids breakfast and gets them ready before he heads off. Maybe he deals with bathtime and cooks dinner so that you can put your feet up in the evening, something like that.
Assuming he gets back from weeknight sports after the kids are in bed, he's already effectively getting two nights off. Getting another half day every other weekend might seem unreasonable to some, not to others. I think the important point is that it does seem that way to you. If you can come up with a compromise along the lines of the above, great. At the risk of stating the glaringly obvious, if one person is completely happy, you haven't compromised. If he's expecting you to take sole charge of the kids for half a day when he COULD be helping you, I think he has to compromise in another area. But you might not be able to. The worst thing you could do would be to agree when you really don't want to. That would create resentment and bad feeling which your kids would almost inevitably pick up on.
One last thing - we men have a short window when we can play sports like football at a reasonable level! So I can definitely understand him wanting to play as much as possible...
Difficult one. Just finished typing the below and it's a little on the rambling side, but thought I would leave it as is.
If he plays sports twice a week after work, I'm inclined to say that you are not being unreasonable.
The way I (as a father of two young ones myself) see it, there are 5 weeknights and 2 full days over the weekend when I "should" be helping with the kids. Any time I do something fun for myself in those periods like going out for a drink with friends after work is great, but I suppose I think of it a bit like my wife doing me a favour rather than something I'm entitled to.
The trouble is if you start thinking along the lines of exchanging kid-free time - e.g. he goes and plays football for half of Saturday and then you go and do your own thing for half a day. Realistically that's not practical as you would spend too little time with both parents present.
So I think there has to be give and take. Most weekend football kicks off at 10:30 or so - perhaps he gives you a lie in, gives the kids breakfast and gets them ready before he heads off. Maybe he deals with bathtime and cooks dinner so that you can put your feet up in the evening, something like that.
Assuming he gets back from weeknight sports after the kids are in bed, he's already effectively getting two nights off. Getting another half day every other weekend might seem unreasonable to some, not to others. I think the important point is that it does seem that way to you. If you can come up with a compromise along the lines of the above, great. At the risk of stating the glaringly obvious, [u]if one person is completely happy, you haven't compromised[/u]. If he's expecting you to take sole charge of the kids for half a day when he COULD be helping you, I think he has to compromise in another area. But you might not be able to. The worst thing you could do would be to agree when you really don't want to. That would create resentment and bad feeling which your kids would almost inevitably pick up on.
One last thing - we men have a short window when we can play sports like football at a reasonable level! So I can definitely understand him wanting to play as much as possible...