My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Speak to new fathers on our Dads forum.

Dadsnet

Are men emotionally grown-up enough for a dadsnet??

36 replies

DrDaddy · 05/01/2007 16:35

Yes, I think we are. I'm new to this site and it feels a bit odd posting in the "men's room". I half expected to meet a certain male popstar in here... DW has been a member for ages. I wanted to see what all the fuss was about and it's amazing. I'd love to be able to exchange ideas, views, frustrations with other dads. Speaking of frustrations, being a dad to 2 little ones means that a certain activity has been off the menu for some time and it's driving me crazy. I can talk to my close male friends and they will suggest solutions:

  1. sort yourself out (yep, been doing that almost every day since I was 14)
  2. porn (sorry, it's SO tedious)
  3. prostitute / escort (degrading and way too risky)

And before you think it, I'm not interested in an affair either.
But what's so great about this site is that it doesn't have to offer solutions, only support and empathy. I think us guys are up to that too, aren't we??
OP posts:
Report
frumpygrumpy · 07/02/2007 20:33

Also, we girls are stereotypical. Its bees to a honeypot, flies to shit

Report
DrDaddy · 07/02/2007 20:28

Abracadabra

OP posts:
Report
frumpygrumpy · 07/02/2007 19:16


Everyone is welcome on MN. Its just that naturally women love to chat and help and we can't keep ourselves from doing it!
Report
Pann · 07/02/2007 19:00

what's the magic word?

Report
DrDaddy · 07/02/2007 18:58

Pann - explain

OP posts:
Report
Pann · 07/02/2007 17:25

yes, but it is crap idea.

Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 05/02/2007 17:26

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

DrDaddy · 05/02/2007 16:50

Phew - work has just been getting in the way of my MN activity

Twig - yes I do realise I'm allowed elsewhere and have posted on other threads. I guess it just feels a bit like home here in the MR.
But it's nice to feel included, in spite of my gender. MN is evolving all the time....

OP posts:
Report
NappiesGalore · 05/02/2007 16:40

and where is bearinthebigbluehouse? did he name change or just go away?

Report
NappiesGalore · 05/02/2007 16:40

i agree with twig. what should it matter whats in your pants? if youre a parent, your pov is valid on here

not neccessarily agreed with...lol

Report
Twiglett · 05/02/2007 16:33

drD .. you do know you're allowed to go everywhere else don't you

like Bearinthebigbluehouse, adad, hub2dee, dominiconnor (ok not him) .. the more you post the more you're part of the site

there really shouldn't be this much focus on gender .. we all have different viewpoints and I don't think the male / female dad/mum persepctive is any different

Report
MerryMarigold · 05/02/2007 16:31

mildmanneredjanitor - you've just given away what your dh thinks of your sex life if you thought it may be him writing the OP!

Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 05/02/2007 12:37

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

DrDaddy · 05/02/2007 12:05

MDOT - thanks for the cross-post. Just posted another on your thread!

MildMannered - PhD is in History. Don't think we're married...

The situation is a lot better now. Partly thanks to getting it off my chest on here and receiving nice advice from both men and women.
It was kind of the reason for the thread in the first place. Can we men get support from this sort of forum? Yes. Could we do it without support from our females MNers? The jury is still out...

OP posts:
Report
MerryMarigold · 05/02/2007 11:09

there was a thread started by a man in the usual mumsnet, precisely on the topic of 'no sex' and there were an amazing number of posters on it, including his wife! it was brilliant to have a mix. why does it have to be a 'boys v girls' thing. i think there will always be more women doing this as we love a natter, even if it's on the computer. i know my dh would rather spend his spare time with a martial arts movie than on a site like this unless it was to do with 'how can i turn my child into a genius football star?'

Report
foxinsocks · 05/02/2007 11:05

DrDaddy, if you are still concerned about the lack of sex situation, you can prob get a few pointers from the various threads on it on the site.

But I would say a few things that contributed to me feeling that way for a while - firstly, it takes a while for your body to get back to a reasonable shape and feeling crap about your shape isn't conducive to wanting to have sex/feeling sexy. Secondly, I found it hard being a mum and reconciling that with being sexy iyswim. I needed to be able to 'switch off' after having had the kids all day before I was able to even contemplate doing anything in the bedroom - so even if that just meant having a long, relaxing bath WITHOUT being disturbed at the end of the day.

So from your point of view - lots of positive comments (but mean them ) about dw's body, a bit of space for dw away from everyone, unexpected help from you around the house (or even, if you can afford it, a cleaner!) and if you can manage it, a babysitter every now and then for some time alone together. And try not to put the pressure on her too much because that can backfire and make her feel worse.

Report
MichaelDadOfTom · 05/02/2007 10:50

One way around the problem of dad's not haveing the time to 'log on' is a texting service. I have heard that these are not too hard to set up. It's one thing that I have looked into. Again will keep you all posted.

Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 05/02/2007 10:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

NbgsYellowFeathers · 05/02/2007 10:48

Dh was talking about setting up a dadsnet the other night.
Not sure how far he'll get though.

Report
MichaelDadOfTom · 05/02/2007 10:45

Yes it seems that I am not alone. I have just joined after DW has been on here for some time and have been thinking the sme for ages.

It would be excellent if the was some sort of 'dadsnet' type forum. As I said in my post dated today, I am looking into hosting one/starting one up. It does feel a bitwierd haveing a mens room. It's just not the same. I hear mums talking about mumsnet all the time but you wont hear guys saying, 'guess what I found out in the men's room on mumsnet'.

Will keep you posted on the progress of the new site and post a link once its up and running.

As far as the certian activity Dr Daddy. I dont know what to say it fills me with dread. I have one 10month old and since he came along activity has decreased by 50% at least and baby 2 is due at the end of may. On the plus side although quantity may go down quality should go up in theory anyway. I would just stick with option 1. Or try and have a regular time 1/2 a fortnight where someone takes the kids and you can spend some time tgether. Good Luck.

Report
DrDaddy · 16/01/2007 14:14

Hey - thanks for all the welcomes and replies. Sorry for the time lag in my response!

JoolsToo - yes I am a Dr, but a PhD not a medic I'm afraid. I can bore for the UK on my thesis though

UnquietDad - cheers for the links. I'll take a look.

OP posts:
Report
HappyDaddy · 10/01/2007 14:53

Emotionally grown up? or just not boring?

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Caligula · 10/01/2007 14:50

What are the swedes responsible for btw?

Report
Caligula · 10/01/2007 14:49

I think you're probably more likely to get different answers from your 1, 2 and 3 on a mixed site because on a dads alone site, it would probably revert back to the old stand-bys. In the company of women, are men more likely to venture out into more emotional territory? I don't know.

Anyway, welcome.

Report
Tortington · 10/01/2007 14:37

where the mumsnet massive decided the swedish were responsible

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.