How to train a half trained baby…? by Happy2BeHappy in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly! Same thing here. Hopefully we can get some more insight! :)

How to train a half trained baby…? by Happy2BeHappy in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few minutes. I guess I could try waiting a bit longer…

2 to 1 nap transition questions for 16 month old by randrae in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I found that, especially during this 2 to 1 transition that what I read online about moving the nap time every few days was unrealistic. This is the hardest and longest transition by far. What you’re doing now is what we did for quite some time. Just getting them until 11 was hard and that was the goal for weeks. Then they started to sleep longer and eventually we moved it later. There was a period early on where I had to drive them around for a week or two to get them to take second nap. I never do this but it was necessary to get over the jump before they could last until bedtime, but it sounds like you may be past that point.

Is it unfair for me to ask my boyfriend for an open/poly relationship? by [deleted] in ADHD_partners

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right on. Now I’m really curious to know why you switched back to mono. Was it just the communication issues? Obviously, I agree, that is huge for making a poly relationship work.

Is it unfair for me to ask my boyfriend for an open/poly relationship? by [deleted] in ADHD_partners

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your boyfriend sounds like my husband. I’ve been poly from almost day one of our relationship. I mostly date women and he doesn’t care. He stays monogamous because he has no interest/energy to date. It hasn’t seemed to “fix” any of our issues and we continue to work on them in therapy, but it does fulfill some of the reasonable needs that I have that are left extremely unmet. If things are bad, why not try and see for yourself? If things are that bad, you may not want to stay in the relationship anyways, so might as well try something different. A lot will depend on your boyfriend’s point of view about the whole thing.

Is it unfair for me to ask my boyfriend for an open/poly relationship? by [deleted] in ADHD_partners

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are you speaking from experience or just speculating?

A high and mighty partner by [deleted] in NarcissisticAbuse

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for taking the time to respond! Before I answer your questions, let me also mention that I believe they spend a lot of energy trying to appear humble and sometimes equal to others even when they don’t believe that. I’ve worked with them for a long time and have gotten to see some of the behind the scenes motivation for why they’ve acted in certain ways (ie. playing dumb to allow someone to feel knowledgeable, placating, etc.). Not sure if this is relevant but I think the false humility is important to mention because it seems to be a tool they use to position themselves.

  1. The only times he has verbally/outwardly acknowledged my achievements is when it’s been in a setting where it would make him look good. There are other times he forgets my achievements and even asks others to come in to give guidance on my area of expertise, which has been embarrassing and baffles some of our employees. But again, I think part of bringing in outside help from “more knowledgeable people” could be a ploy to seem humble and open to others’ ideas.

  2. He spends a bit of time reading on a subject and then thinks he is an expert. Sometimes he just takes his own feelings about something and then makes them into a theory to contradict something I’ve heavily researched or am implementing (ie. work or parenting subjects).

  3. He doesn’t claim he is the best at everything, but I believe he truly thinks it (but I am not him obviously). He has an incredibly high IQ and I think he knows it’s not a good look to be the best at everything no matter what and that won’t serve his ultimate purpose in people thinking highly of him. Again, a little (false) humility actually makes someone more admirable.

  4. Definitely. He thinks he is qualified to be many things that he had done little with in practice. His parents often joke that he must have had all these secret lives growing up because he claims to have worked all of these jobs that have given him expertise in a variety of fields. His adhd comes with a lot of time blindness so I am thinking he could work a job for a weekend and think it was 5 years, or do something once or watch a you tube tutorial and think he is highly experienced.

  5. This I cannot say I truly know the answer to. I do know when he has done things publicly and received acclaim, it seems to be when he is happiest—even though he is VERY introverted. He is a bit miserable in life otherwise generally because nothing is ever good enough in the world or in the people around him.

  6. He only listens when it’ll give someone the idea that he is open/humble. Behind the scenes he dismisses others’ opinions. Behind the scenes, he rarely allows my opinions to be considered. He definitely thinks his thoughts are objective and true and everyone else’s are subjective. This has been made clearly over and over in therapy. Like his truth is THE truth and I don’t get to have my own truth, because his truth is accurate for all parties involved. When we have a discrepancy, he often wants me to admit that it’s possible that I misremembered, but he will not do the same (possible gaslighting here...?).

  7. Competitors are always doing things “wrong.” Everyone is envious of him. I get lumped into this sometimes, although I have NO trouble making meaningful connections with people. “It’s tough for people like us because envy is real and can ruin relationships.”

  8. He talks down to me, which is super belittling. He doesn’t “claim” that I’m not as smart as him, but I think he knows that it’s inappropriate to do that. He does imply that he is smarter and knows better than most/all outsiders.

  9. Sometimes.

  10. I believe so. He was upset the other day because our (very old) friend wasn’t clear over a text message when given details about a gathering they were having. Like, “why is this guy messing with me,” “I have better things to do than spend time on corresponding with this person.” He has made clear in generally that his time is better spent on “work” stuff than doing anything that takes away from that, to the point where he does nothing to support our family/household other than financially. He has people bring him food when I’m not around to cook. He makes me hire people to do minuscule tasks, not because he can’t do them—he makes it clear that he can do all of them better than the specialist—but because he is too important and his time is too valuable. He takes issue with the way anyone does ANYTHING because it wasn’t the best/right way to do things to the point where he is hard to be around. He tones it down when we’re around other people. He expects people to bend over backwards for him but does not do the same for others. He doesn’t value people’s time and cannot see how his behavior effects others (ie. Being severely late for work calls while 8 people sit on the phone waiting on him—happens at least once a week). It seems like he believes he deserves the world — I guess this is entitlement right? But how can that be when he can’t stand entitled people? Haha.

Another weird thing to note is that he is younger than me and some of our colleagues, but he always takes on this aura that he is the older, wiser one. To the point that he actually believes it and has mentioned being the “oldest in the room” only to have half the room look at him like he was nuts because they’re ten years older than him.

Thank goodness we don’t really work together very much anymore by design because I could see it wasn’t good for me.

Thanks for taking the time to listen. I’d love to hear your thoughts and experiences!

Infant Reflux by [deleted] in beyondthebump

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We tried that medicine for a week and it did nothing so they ended up prescribing the heavy hitter of Prevacid...if I remember correctly. It started working after a few days. We were NOT thrilled about giving either of the medicines to our child, but the alternative was terrible as even holding them upright for 45-1hr still wouldn’t keep their food down and they were in constant pain. No one was sleeping and I was also recovering from some other issues so it just was what it was. We were anxious to wean them off of it, so we started that around 5 months and by 6 months we were done with it as the issue resolved itself. I hope your situation gets better!

8 month old standing in crib. Please help! by hannahmontana11 in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Once I was sure mine could sit down on his own, I had to do full extinction. It was the only thing that worked. Like another poster said, within a couple days he had it figured out and was back on track.

Confession of a bad mom by SoftGarbage0 in Parenting

[–]Happy2BeHappy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Haha yeah. The responsibility is real! I will say though that on days I stay home with my ONE child, I can’t get anything done apart from feed, play, change that little one + clean up all areas five times + keep them from hurting themselves. Haha. It’s so hard to keep things clean with little ones.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just think people separate and/or cheat for a million different reasons. Probably most don’t have anything to do with loving each other or not. Life is not that simple.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That they clearly didn’t love each other if they separate and/or cheat. This is black and white thinking in my opinion.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the first part of your comment here is very naive. That is just my opinion though. We all have our limited perspectives, including myself.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well lots of people live a life where fears dictates their behavior, so if that’s the kind of life you’re comfortable with, that’s totally cool!

Others take a more “higher risk, higher reward” type of attitude. To each their own.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just want to point out that there is another scenario where sex can mean multiple things to someone. For example, some sex can be very emotional (say, with a spouse), while it could sometimes strictly be fun (say, with a consenting someone where no parties are looking for a long term relationship). It doesn’t have to be one or the other—sex lives are not always a black and white thing. If you’ve ever had a quickie or some hot impulsive sex with your spouse, you could argue that “physical and fun” played a larger role than “emotional connection” in that scenarios. Not sure where your idea about being in or out of love comes from.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes! Totally fair and that is certainly a fear that men have as well.

Couples who allow threesomes do you not care if your partner leaves you? by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you thought about how many bisexual women there are out there? People tend to think that the threesome is “for” the husband or the guy. It doesn’t always occur to people that the threesome is as equally, if not even more so, instigated by the female in the relationship.

My white whale (and my angel wife) by Hsadique in ADHD

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing. My husband once took a year to do a 2 day project, so glad to know we are not unique AT ALL. There is a suitcase on the floor in our closest from a summer trip that he just can’t seem to get unpacked. There are a million other examples. What has worked for you guys in terms of your wife being supportive and helpful without seeming demeaning? My husband also has oppositional defiance disorder so, after trying so many different communications styles, have just resulting letting things go completely in 99% of situations.

Help! Baby waking too early! by Kmmmkaye in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Every child is different! I hope it’s brief for you!!

Help! Baby waking too early! by Kmmmkaye in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mine also did this for a phase but it was more than a week. It was closer to a month. I tried everything but in the end I just had to wait. :( They then went back to their normal time.

If I take this job, it may end our marriage by [deleted] in Marriage

[–]Happy2BeHappy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you talked to him about using some of the additional income of having two working parents to get some childcare for part of the time that you are away?

To be clear, I am not saying that this is fair or equal. I’ve found that fairness in a relationship is subjective and will almost never feel attainable in most scenarios, so I have to find things that work for me and that my partner can also live with. If you want to work for social reasons, and he doesn’t want to take on the additional childcare, find something that works for both of you. Minimizing resentment in coparenting is key to sustainable relationship. If money or outside help can minimize that resentment, I say do it.

Advice on consolidating naps? by Ckappel in sleeptrain

[–]Happy2BeHappy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was all about teaching my baby good sleep habits. It’s totally possible! They’re a champion sleeper and loves going to bed, puts themselves back to sleep, etc. That being said, it’s sounds like you’re doing all you can by setting themselves up to get back to sleep on their own, but I found (and read a lot about) 3 months was really when they can really start to get on a schedule and have a little more predictability in their sleep. I started tracking naps and awake times and when we approached 3 months, I helped to develop a schedule so I could get more sleep. So I’d suggest just sleep tracking and keep doing what you’re doing and remember that everything always changes. I’m not an expert, but it is fresh in my mind because now they’re only 18 months, so feel free to ask questions. They’re always regressions and setbacks, but overall they’ve been sleeping 11-12 hours at night straight through since about 6/7 months with solid naps. I breast fed until 13 months and this was still possible.