MsPurrmeow
Posts: 254
Joined: 10/30/2004 Status: offline
|
I'd recommend sitting down and writing things out in a technical manner. The answer, is to not HAVE to include the third in everything, but to make sure that the effort is equitable in all directions. (Equitable, remember that, equal is not a reality.) Write things down. If someone thinks you spend too much time doing one thing, then get it very, very clear about how much time they think should you should be doing it and how much time THEY think you should be working on the house. Start the conversations from there. There is usually a fear of abandonment issue, or self-esteem thing behind those types of statements that need to be handled out in the open. Make sure you spend time with all three together, and if you have time with just one, set a time to go check in with the third for an affectionate grope, just to keep them in the picture, even if they are not in the activity. This is usually about being left behind, and although we know it's not the reality, our hearts do funny things to us from time to time. It doesn't hurt to take a few minutes to care for each other in the middle of a game. We are much in the same boat. Of three of us, two are geeks, two are nudists, two like tennis, two like sci-fi, thwo RPG, two like comedy, two like long drives to nowhere and back and two like trips to museums about mechanical flying apparatus. Those "two" in those things changes for each and every one. We may overlap, but we are not all identical in interests. I do a game night with one husband, but watch Law & Order with the other. The "odd one out" needs to work on seeing this time as an opportunity to focus on himself. Even as the crux of the "V", I get my own time alone when the boys are out doing something they enjoy. That's the way we turn this around from being "left behind" to being blessed with personal time. Good luck. Purr
|