Question:
How do you get household basics (like budget decisions, kid issues, etc.) talked about and agreed upon when your spouse works 14 hours a day in residency and comes home exhausted? I want to be in unity in decision-making, but it’s tough to bombard him with things when I know he’s so exhausted. Tips?
Answer:
Thank you for submitting this question. It is one that most medical couples struggle with. When both of you are busy and exhausted, it can be hard to feel like you are in sync with decisions and agendas. Often, when you do finally have time to discuss these things, one or both of you may be too tired to actually make a decision, and you realize the next day that it still isn’t resolved. Try some of these suggestions this week and see if it makes your teamwork more effective.
Be Clear About What Support You Need
Sometimes a spouse may not realize whether you are asking for their input or if you are just giving them information. Be specific. “I need you to help me come up with a plan for Ella’s summer camps. I need to register tomorrow, so we need to make a decision together tonight.”
First Things First
It’s true; you won’t have an endless amount of time to go over lists and lists of housekeeping items. Prioritize which things to discuss and focus on those first. There are reasons why effective business meetings center around an agenda. It’s easy to get sidetracked and off topic – or worse, to go around and around something without resolving it. Try to create a short agenda with specifics to keep you on track and make your discussion more effective.
Set a Specific Time Each Week for a Planning Meeting
If the housekeeping agenda items are discussed on a weekly basis, they are less likely to pile up and become overwhelming. It will also help reduce the frustration that your spouse is never around to talk about these things. With physician’s crazy schedules, you may not have the luxury of a set day and time that remains consistent week after week, but don’t let that deter you. Get creative and find a way to check things off each week, so they don’t become overwhelming.
Sprint or a Marathon?
Decide together if it works better to discuss them all at once or spread them out over a week. Some couples get overwhelmed when they have to make many decisions at once, while others get frustrated when the decision-making conversations come up night after night, and they don’t have any time just to enjoy each other.
Give Them a Heads Up
Prepare him ahead of time rather than springing it on him when he get home. A quick text late afternoon that says, “Hey Babe – Just a reminder we need to talk about a new vacuum when you get home. Hope you’ve had a great day,” can at least put it on his radar. It doesn’t mean he will remember when he gets home, but at least it won’t come as a total surprise when you bring it up again.
Executive Decisions
Decide ahead of time which things qualify for an executive decision. One woman told me she was afraid to make decisions because she didn’t want her husband to feel left out. When he explained which things he was okay with her deciding, it made it easier for her to just make an executive decision and let him know about it later.
When it comes to the financial piece of executive decisions though, it may help to decide on a predetermined limit that you both are okay with the other person spending without discussing it together first.
Share Calendars
Create a syncing calendar in which to manage all the family events. Google calendar is wonderful for this. Each family member or topic can have a different color and can be shared and edited by those you give permission to. So, for example, Timmy’s schedule was blue, you could easily visualize where he needed to be at any given moment. School from 8:30-2:30, soccer from 5-6, scouts from 7-8, etc. When your partner receives her call schedule for the month, she can quickly block the time out in yellow so you know not to schedule friends for dinner on the night she’ll be working. Even if you are not together, you can both separately look at the schedule and have some semblance of being on the same page.
If you are in a medical relationship, I invite you to submit your Medical Marriage questions to NurturingMedicalMarriages {at} gmail {dot} com and join the Nurturing Medical Marriages ™ Facebook Group.