Dear Carolyn: When we had kids, I stayed home with them while my husband worked, sometimes with long hours and lots of traveling. I got used to having the kids on my own, and taking them to the zoo, museums, hiking trails, etc.
Now that they're older and I'm working during the school year, it's been harder to go on our getaways. My husband is currently furloughed, so he isn't traveling and has to take Fridays off.
Today, I saw a perfect day and took the kids hiking. My husband got very upset. He feels I took them to a prime family place and he can't understand why I couldn't wait until Friday, or at least ask him to come along today. I've been to this place many times before, so I guess I never considered it special. And the weather was perfect, which it might not be on Friday.
But he told me he expects me to at least invite him when something like this happens again. I grew up on a farm where our family vacations were "We don't have anything we can do today so let's jump in the car and go someplace and be back in time to milk the cows," and I love spontaneous adventure, but he's a planner and has a problem with spur-of-the-moment ideas.
I have a feeling he's just going to make me feel guilty for not waiting until the long weekend. I don't have a problem coming up with something we can do then, but I'm seeing his request as his having to "OK" everything I do with the kids before I get to do it, and it's leaving a weird taste in my mouth. Am I overreacting?
Carolyn says: Possibly overreacting, definitely undercommunicating — and, I suspect, overprotecting your turf.
Maybe you know him well enough to jump to the conclusions you did, but from my perspective, you've taken his one questionable reaction and run with it — all the way to a cultural clash flecked with implications that he's controlling. Touchdown?
A once-powerfully employed, now-furloughed breadwinner is going to feel significant stress over his new position. I don't think you can judge him or his reactions fairly without lodging that firmly in mind.