My wife stays out all night while I'm at home caring for our newborn. Now her ATM withdrawals have me worried: SAUCY SECRETS

My wife stays out all night while I'm at home caring for our newborn. Now her ATM withdrawals have me worried: SAUCY SECRETS
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My wife stays out all night while I'm at home caring for our newborn. Now her ATM withdrawals have me worried: SAUCY SECRETS
Published: Feb, 08 2025 13:53

Dear Jana,. My wife and I have a five-month-old baby, and I feel like I'm the only one who's being a proper parent. She still wants to go to concerts, party with her friends, and sometimes even stays out all night, leaving me to do the night feeds alone. She says she 'needs to feel like herself again' but I'm struggling to see how that justifies abandoning our baby for up to 18 hours at a time. On top of that, I'm also concerned because I've seen several ATM withdrawals of $300 from our joint bank account while she's out, and we all know what that means.

 [In this week's edition of Saucy Secrets, Jana helps a new dad who is worried about his wife's late-night partying and suspicious ATM withdrawals that suggest she is buying cocaine]
Image Credit: Mail Online [In this week's edition of Saucy Secrets, Jana helps a new dad who is worried about his wife's late-night partying and suspicious ATM withdrawals that suggest she is buying cocaine]

She banks her breastmilk for when she's out and the next day, but I'm concerned they may still be contaminated with substances that aren't good for our child. I don't want to be controlling, but I also don't want to be the only responsible parent. Am I being unreasonable?. Anonymous. Jana offers advice to a new dad who is worried about his wife's partying and suspicious ATM withdrawals. Dear Anonymous,. I'll be honest: right up until you mentioned those $300 ATM withdrawals, I was ready to jump to your wife's defence!.

 [Jana helps a woman whose fiancé asked her to sign a prenup that includes some odd clauses]
Image Credit: Mail Online [Jana helps a woman whose fiancé asked her to sign a prenup that includes some odd clauses]

I mean, she carried around a watermelon (your watermelon) for nine months, without even the help of a cold, crisp glass of chardonnay. However, if the $300 withdrawals are what we think they might be, then I'm going to have to tell you to pull up your big boy pants and start demanding answers. It's one thing to let your hair down and cut loose for a while after a major life upheaval, but it's another thing entirely to put your child's health at risk.

In fact, if I'm honest with you, I'm a little surprised, as a husband and father, that you have waited this long to take action. No, you're not being unreasonable - but you are being an enabler. It's time to share your feelings and fears, both of which are entirely justified, and start working on a game plan to get your wife straightened out. Now, we don't want to be too harsh on her. Her hormones are probably going up and down like a rollercoaster and she deserves a sympathetic ear - but also a stern word.

In this week's edition of Saucy Secrets, Jana helps a new dad who is worried about his wife's late-night partying and suspicious ATM withdrawals that suggest she is buying cocaine. I would go so far as getting your mother-in-law (or a close family member) involved, to check on her and see if she is doing okay. If she's anything like me, she may be using partying as a distraction to avoid facing the fact her life has changed significantly.

So when you talk to her, you need to first acknowledge something important: that you understand becoming a mother is a total identity earthquake; that you can see she is having a hard time processing how she went from a person with total autonomy - able to drink, dance and disappear whenever she pleased - to having to be someone whose body, time and sleep are no longer entirely her own. Tell her it makes sense that she wants to reclaim some of that freedom.

But remind her that you become a parent, too. And, unlike her, it sounds as though you don't get to disappear with your friends all night and snap back to reality when it's convenient. While she's chasing her old life on the dance floor, you're at home being both mum and dad. And that's not fair. Talk to her. Properly. Not passive-aggressively, not in a sarcastic 'oh, must've been an expensive Uber' way, but in a 'I love you, I'm worried, and this can't continue' way.

Tell her what you've noticed, how it's making you feel, and, most importantly, ask her why she's doing this. Is she feeling lost? Trapped? Bored? Scared?. It might be easier to believe she's just chasing fun, but you can have fun without staying up all night and spending $300 every weekend on, well, you know what. And if she brushes you off, this is the moment to stand firm - not as a jealous, controlling husband, but as an equal parent.

I really hope this is just a case of post-baby rebellion gone rogue. But if it's something deeper, you owe it to your child, and to yourself, to take it seriously. I've always trusted my best friend, but lately her friendship with my boyfriend is making me uncomfortable. It started with the occasional group chat banter, but now she's constantly sending him memes, tagging him in posts, even DM'ing him inside jokes that I'm not part of.

The other night, he laughed at his phone and I knew she had texted him even before he told me. She swears it's innocent, and my boyfriend insists there's nothing to worry about, but why does she need to be talking to him so much?. Am I overreacting, or is this a red flag? And how do I set boundaries without looking insecure or jealous?. Sasha. Dear Sasha,. Oh, Sasha. Red flag, red flag! I get being friendly with your best friend's partner, but when you find your boyfriend giggling at his phone because of her messages… well, it's not on.

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