Dear Eric: My husband and I have been married for 10 years. We both came out of long previous marriages (more than 20 years each). I have three adult children, and he has two.
My children’s father passed away suddenly three years ago, and since then they have become a lot closer to us. We tend to see them a lot more than we see my husband’s kids.
He can’t seem to get why my children want to spend so much time with us. He says he’s glad his children aren’t like that.
Oftentimes when I want to do something with my children, he doesn’t want to. So, more than not, we don’t go see them. My husband’s job takes him out of town every so often, and I take that opportunity to see my children.
For some reason, this bothers my husband. He will say, “Why do you always have to see your kids when I’m gone?” I have explained to him that it’s because most of the time he doesn’t want to, so I’m taking the opportunity while he is away.
I have asked him several times why this bothers him. He can’t seem to give me an answer. This is getting old. Is there something I’m missing?
Eric says: Your husband needs to knock it off. It’s possible he genuinely doesn’t understand why you want to be close to your kids, but it’s hardly an outrageous thing to want.
If I’m being generous, I’d say maybe he’s envious. That’s OK. But he needs to express it in a different way. Or — and this is preferable — he needs to deal with that envy on his own and make amends to you. And you can tell him that. “My relationship with my kids is very important to me. I accept that this isn’t something that’s important to you, even though I wish it was different. I don’t want to debate it anymore. Can you agree to that?”