Ask Amy: Husband doesn’t like the time I spend with my kids

Dear Amy: My husband and I have been married for 10 years. We both have adult children from previous marriages.

My husband isn’t as close with his children as I am with mine. My children and I have always spent a lot of time together and we connect through text or phone calls almost daily.

My husband believes this is excessive. He doesn’t see or keep in touch with his children that way.

I try to explain to him that my children grew up in a close family, and we remain close.

I think we should be glad that they like us and want to spend time with us.

I have recently retired. My husband is still working. He travels out of town about twice a month.

When he goes out of town, I take the opportunity to see my children.

This upsets my husband. He says, “Why do you always have to go somewhere or do something when I go out of town? Why can’t you just stay home?”

When I asked why this bothers him, he claimed that it was because “it costs money.”

We are not struggling financially, my kids always pay their own way, and most of the time I’m just spending time with them in their homes.

I’m not doing anything wrong. It’s not like I am going out to bars.

I am always back home no later than 9 p.m. and I always keep in touch with my husband while I’m out.

I finally told him that this is his problem, and he needs to get over it because I am not doing anything wrong.

Well, it just happened again.

Am I missing something?

– At a Loss

Dear At a Loss: It’s one thing for your husband to try to limit your time with your children when he is around, but his desire to also control who you see when he is away is completely ridiculous, over the top, and – concerning.

Your husband’s perspective might be that he would like for the two of you to spend more of your “together-time” socializing with people who are closer to your own age and stage in life. If so, then he should work harder to develop these friendships.

And unless your daily phone and texting contact with your children is obsessive, damaging, or taking your attention away from your own work, hobbies, friendships, or unduly interfering with your marriage, then it is simply not his business.

Close and intimate marriages thrive when spouses place the marriage at the center of their lives, but it’s a simple fact that your relationship with your children is longer standing, lifelong and unique.

One way for your husband to honor his marriage to you would be for him to love and respect the kind of parent you are.

Because this is an ongoing issue, you would both benefit from talking it out with the aid of a counselor.

You can email Amy Dickinson at [email protected] or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068.