this post was submitted on 12 Apr 2024
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Aw thank you. I am by no means perfect and I make a lot of mistakes and say the wrong thing but I try.
Thank you also for your comments.
It's funny, when it comes to social situations, this is more me than her. For parenting, we both definitely have our limits and try to give each other time to take a break and recharge, and I try to handle most of the cleaning/straightening up. The problem I often run into is when it comes to her stuff - she is definitely a bit cluttered and once something has just been sitting for a day or two, it is like she gets a blindness towards it, meanwhile it's driving me crazy that it hasn't been put away. However, when I try to put her stuff away it never ends well, either I don't know where to put it (because she doesn't have a spot for it) or I say the wrong thing in trying to ask her what to do with it. Do you have any suggestions on how to help support her straightening up her items without making her feel judged or pressured?
How does he help you organize your thoughts? Just curious if there is a line of questioning that you find useful or what.
Haha yeah, there is a lot of forgetting stuff and me needing to remind her to do stuff, I don't mind a ton but it can get frustrating, especially when it feels like I'm supposed to be the one remembering 'everything'. I feel like we have got a good system down in that I usually try to handle keeping our calendar up-to-date and reminding her of stuff on the calendar.
What helped me was having a designated place for all of the important things and things I tend to displace often, but that's something I had to initiate on my own. Maybe you can suggest that and help her actually come up with specific places. Like, we had to mount some small shelves and a jewelry organizer and a peg board to organize some things, but it was well worth the effort.
He starts out by just making himself available and listening, which solves the problem for me like 70% of the time because I process things externally aka verbally, so as I talk, I solve my own problems. In the other 30%, he just sort of reflects on what I'm saying, first asking me what solutions I already thought of (this is crucial because then it doesn't seem patronizing when he offers solutions). And then, he is a quasi-engineer, and he is great at triage and decision-making, so he will throw out ideas but he will never force me to go a specific way, just make suggestions and let me decide.
I hope this helps!