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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU about expecting DH to be less stressed on weekend outings with kids?

63 replies

mothersdayq · 15/03/2026 11:10

Trying to work out if I’m expecting too much here.

We live in a big city and have two children: baby and 4yo. I’m a SAHM (with a passive income to avoid a drip feed) and quite used to just getting on with things when we’re out (crying, tantrums, snacks, etc).

He finds our 4yo difficult to deal with due to normal 4yo things like tantruns, constantly changing their mind (“I want my banana peeled / no not peeled”), stopping every five minutes on a walk to point at a leaf or something interesting, spillages of drinks or just the endless talking. All fairly typical stuff but he finds it quite overwhelming.

Then with the baby he panics as soon as the baby cries. Yesterday for example we’d been out walking for about an hour and the baby started crying in the buggy. Instead of just calmly heading somewhere to sit, DH immediately started panicking about there being no benches and his mood immediately changed, no chatting, stressed expression. We ended up walking to a café which was always the obvious solution anyway.

He then suggested maybe we should bring bottles so we can just feed immediately anywhere the baby cries. But realistically the baby is quite big and I can’t just stand in the middle of a park feeding, I’d still need somewhere to sit like a bench or café. He also asked why we make it so difficult for ourselves by going on days out as opposed to mainly staying home or going out for short one hour bursts so we’re never too far from home.

He gets very stressed if the baby cries in public, scanning the room, worrying about people looking at us, wanting to leave immediately even if we’re somewhere casual like a Costa.

The overall effect is that within about 10 minutes of an outing I often feel like it would actually be calmer if I’d just taken the kids myself. But the flip side is that I don’t like the idea that he opts out and I’m always the one doing everything while he gets the relaxed role.

Yesterday it sort of illustrated the dynamic: we were in a café while I was feeding the baby and the 4yo had slightly spilled something. DH was getting increasingly stressed so I said “do you want to go on a little walk?” and he actually it became far less stressful.

So I’m stuck between two things: outings with him often feel more stressful than outings without him but i also don’t want him opting out completely and me doing everything alone

Am I being unreasonable expecting him to cope with this stage of parenting a bit more calmly? Or is this just a phase some people struggle with until the kids are older?

The kids thing aside, he’s loving, caring, does a lot at home. Just struggles with kids stuff.

OP posts:
Beautifulhaiku · 23/03/2026 17:04

mothersdayq · 23/03/2026 15:56

@LameBorzoihe gets annoyed if I bring it up. “It’s just who I am” “I struggle with kids / parenting” “it’s difficult for me” “if you don’t like how I am, you can leave”

'If you don't like how I am, you can leave" - wow. This, and some of your other responses, make it sound much more like a 'partner who isn't willing to put in any effort on his side to make things better' issue than a 'dad who find parenting stressful' issue. With the latter you could work together as a team to improve things, but it doesn't sound like he's willing to do this. Has he always had that attitude?

Jellybunny98 · 23/03/2026 17:05

Beautifulhaiku · 23/03/2026 17:04

'If you don't like how I am, you can leave" - wow. This, and some of your other responses, make it sound much more like a 'partner who isn't willing to put in any effort on his side to make things better' issue than a 'dad who find parenting stressful' issue. With the latter you could work together as a team to improve things, but it doesn't sound like he's willing to do this. Has he always had that attitude?

This. Honestly I don’t think parenting and the chaos comes naturally to everyone, it’s something you have to learn and adjust to and work on, if he’s not prepared to work on it then you have to decide if you’re prepared to accept that.

Beautifulhaiku · 23/03/2026 17:10

mothersdayq · 15/03/2026 12:41

@AbzMoz
Thanks, I do see the point about him needing to live it a bit more.

My question is more how when his default response tends to be panic. Even at home he gets quite flustered by normal kid stuff. For example if the 4yo suddenly changes her mind about something small (banana cut / not cut etc) he gets quite stressed about it.

And if the baby is crying during something normal like a nappy change he’ll come into the room asking “are you alright, are you alright?” (with a suggestion of “MAKE HIM STOP! Why is he crying?”) as if something is wrong, when it’s just a baby crying for a minute while being changed.

So I’m not against easing him into it at all, I’m just not sure what the “start small” version actually looks like when even ordinary kid chaos seems to overwhelm him a bit.

Why is it your job alone to fix this? He should be coming up with suggestions and trying different things, beyond 'I will only look after the baby if you somehow ensure it doesn't cry', and 'I will only look after the child if they are on best behaviour'. Really not sure how you've put up with this for so long to be honest.

'And if the baby is crying during something normal like a nappy change he’ll come into the room asking “are you alright, are you alright?”' - This infuriates me just to read it - how do you respond in the moment?

If he truly has anxiety then it's his responsibility to seek help for that. Has he looked into this at all?

mothersdayq · 24/03/2026 22:17

@Amiacoolorwarmcolour
i mean going to the local zoo 20 mins drive away, a different park that’s a half an hour bus journey, a town 40 mins away etc. instead of the local park across the road from us. He’d prefer to be within 10 mins walking distance from our house all the time. Ideally leave the house, get a coffee, walk for 20 mins, return.

DH really struggles if left 1 on 1 with our eldest. At the slightest hint of an issue (eg I’ve left them cottage pie for dinner to heat up and she doesn’t fancy cottage pie that day / he couldn’t understand what she was asking for so she had a meltdown because couldn’t get her message across) he panics, gets in a mood, tells me this is impossible and asks when I’m returning.
absolutely wouldn’t consider parenting courses / therapy / anything of the sort.

OP posts:
mothersdayq · 24/03/2026 22:21

@MintoTimehe just insists that he isn’t made for parenting, it’s hard. That I’m naturally better at it. We can’t all be as good as I am at it. I always knew I wanted kids and he was very take it or leave it about having them, so perhaps that’s why. That’s his excuse…

even at home with no one watching if the baby is crying too much he’ll excuse himself into a different room. We don’t both need to deal with the baby at the same time, right? And he struggles to listen to the crying, needs some peace and quiet.

OP posts:
mothersdayq · 24/03/2026 22:24

@sittingonabeach
when youngest was a baby he was similar but perhaps not as vocal in letting me know how much he struggles with these things, didn’t remove himself from tricky situations quite so fast.

Hes not confirmed this but I think with my eldest there was also the “novelty factor” of having a baby and wanting to do dad things but now he’s happy to let me do it all. That’s a guess though based on behaviour.

OP posts:
mothersdayq · 24/03/2026 22:31

@Anon501178
i don’t know for sure. I’ve had tensions with his family (unrelated to this, just clashing personalities and different ideas about life) before so it’s a sensitive topic and he wouldn’t say a word wrong about them. They were great parents. The best parents. None of his anxieties or “quirks” are because of them.

OP posts:
Abd80 · 24/03/2026 22:34

In my experience of three breastfed babies if they’re upset they cry even more when presented with a bottle, whereas if you just breastfeed them straight away they’re immediately happy and quiet. So I wouldn’t bother with the faff of pumping and washing bottles if it were me.
if I were you I’d wear baby in a sling for the next day out. So husband can’t check out and make the buggy or pram his job.
can you ask him why things like muddy shoes or big feelings / indecision /normal behaviour from small children bothers him so much ? Was he punished as a small child for these small and normal things ? Were his parents strict or cruel to him?

mothersdayq · 24/03/2026 22:40

@Abd80
muddy shoes get everything else muddy around (the car, his jeans if he tries to lift the child, the hallway at home etc) and he hates mess.
big feelings - he doesn’t like noise / loud crying and just thinks it shouldn’t happen.
no, his parents are / were perfect parents, how dare I say anything against them

OP posts:
MintoTime · 25/03/2026 08:47

I'm sorry OP, it sounds like you're married to someone who was not prepared for the realities of parenting, and who is not willing to change in order to be a better parent / partner now that he's gone along with it and had children with you.

He doesn't like mess
He doesn't like crying / loud noises
He is perpetually tired and needs to nap
He gets anxious and embarrassed if people are looking at him
He's 'not into parenting'

How did you come to a decision to actually have children? Did he agree to it? Does he have any nephews / neices / much exposure to children before his own?

mothersdayq · 25/03/2026 12:37

@MintoTime
we came to the decision to have kids because we both wanted kids.
I think he understood that it’s hard in theory but didn’t have any practical experience, no nieces or nephews. Of course some friends had children but it’s very different, coming to visit for an hour or two vs having your own kids.

OP posts:
CombatBarbie · 25/03/2026 12:54

mothersdayq · 25/03/2026 12:37

@MintoTime
we came to the decision to have kids because we both wanted kids.
I think he understood that it’s hard in theory but didn’t have any practical experience, no nieces or nephews. Of course some friends had children but it’s very different, coming to visit for an hour or two vs having your own kids.

So then give him the harsh reality, he goes out without you with the kids. You have managed, why cant he. Honestly I don't know why you dont have the ick.

CreepingCrone · 25/03/2026 13:48

@mothersdayq this sounds really tough on you. Does he ever take his children out without you? Do you ever get time to yourself? If not, this needs to change.
My.kids are grown ups now, but this smacks of weaponised incompetence.
To be Frank, he'll never get the hang of it if he doesn't get chance to develop these coping & parenting skills.
I think you need to rip the plaster off and leave him to it. Show him you have every confidence in him, and let him get on with it. He might not enjoy it and he might be in a bad mood - sorry, that comes with the territory!
He's had a very soft start to being a dad. He's your partner, you're not his mum. Makes some concrete plans for yourself (cinema/a day out/ trip to a museum/ meeting friends for lunch), and leave him to it. Then do it again. He doesn't need to know exact location or timings - you don't want him hovering outside the restaurant while you eat!!
Practice makes perfect. Don't baby your husband, he needs to develop his confidence and will develop a newfound admiration for how easy you make it look.
And you don't need to ask his permission for this. It's for his own good. It's for your own good too. And it's necessary and beneficial for your children to have a proper relationship with their dad.
Good luck, I have every confidence in you 🖤

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