Ok I want DH to take control of half the things that need to be done and figure out for himself what needs to be done without me saying what I “want” (what any normal adult would understand needs to be done). Clear enough? |
You posting on DCUM doesn't help. If you had this conversation with DH and he doesn't respond just divorce the dud |
You’re missing the point. Prods to just “communicate” are another way of framing “women should be in charge of the administrative tasks and just tell (and remind) men what to do.” How about, instead, men say “don’t forget you need to make lunches for tomorrow.” |
Um no you are complaining on a website vs actually trying to address an issue |
I see I am late to the convo, but how are they going to be equal partners when they watched their boomer dads do nothing? |
Female here, and agree with learned helplessness. What I would immediately push back in him is anything to do with him - his wardrobe, his parents, etc. His clothes are falling apart - let him figure it out. MIL didn't get flowers for Mothers day - too bad, should have raised her biy better. And so on. Let the world nag him. |
Boomer Dads are the worst. Which is funny since they’re basically the same as the guys in the Greatest Generation who were, by definition, the best. I guess your relative worth to society depends a lot on whether you get the chance to kill Nazis. |
I have personally known many women I know are so over the top controlling over the kids that the husband just stops even trying to do anything. I have also known several women who flat out refused to rejoin the workforce even when they’d previously agreed with their husband to do so.
Stuff changes when you have kids. You either grow together or you don’t and some of it is society and some of it is personal. You can’t make a broad declaration. That’s why there are so many different views even on this one thread. |
I’m disgusted by the privileged woman (allegedly an immigrant from a third world country) who posted this BS:
Please, explain to me how you could type such utter rubbish? Am I missing the part where you made it clear this is your pipe dream? MILLIONS of women in the USA were forced to leave the workforce because of lack of childcare in the pandemic and beyond, because there is still a critical shortage of childcare and it is more unaffordable than ever. I rarely get seriously angry, but reading that absurd declaration made me want to punch the poster, who is clearly so privileged now (immigrant success story, yay!) as to be totally ignorant of the lived experience of millions of American mothers right now. |
I'm the PP. I guess I don't understand why YOU are figuring out childcare or play dates or carpools or something for the time that your husband was at work. Why doesn't he do that? I guess if I were a SAHM and would normally be responsible for the children during the day while my husband worked and I was going to go out of town I could see it being my responsibility to find someone to fill my shoes when I'm gone, but since we both work, we're both responsible for the kids after work. Sure there are times when one of us isn't available because we have to work late, travel for work, etc., but that's when the other person steps up. I just can't imagine being married to someone who doesn't know how to take care of their own children. |
I say this as a woman who breastfed (for a while): If you do exclusive breastfeeding you are setting yourself up for a "Mom does everything" dynamic from the get-go. |
OP made the title “millennial men” and then starts talking about doctors & Yale Law School in her post |
What do you mean by full careers? Our HHI is about $500K from salaries (not investments, real estate, etc.) and we make about the same (it has fluctuated over time and then there are bonuses, benefits, etc., but it's approximately equal). I think we have by far the best set up, and I would choose those over one of us making $500K and the other making nothing every day of the week. We're equal partners on all fronts and we're very happily married with multiple kids. To me, this is the ideal situation, but maybe that's just me. |
You husband may be weaponing his incompetence but you are enabling a lot of this behavior. He doesn't make a doctor or dentist appointment for himself? Then he doesn't go. Let him get cavities, etc. Seriously, you treat him like a child. YOU want his clothes ironed. Nothing absolute HAS to be ironed, unless he is in the military (which it doesn't sound like he is). So let him wear wrinkled clothes. Or, if you're the one who cares, then do it but acknowledge that you're doing it for yourself. Pictures are voluntary. Sure, they're important to you, and that's fine, but if you take that task on, again, you need to acknowledge that you're doing it for yourself. Stop buying gifts for his family. If he doesn't buy them gifts then they don't get gifts. That's not on you. You don't get to take it on and then complain about it. Either do it graciously or not at all. As for his clothes, he's an adult. If he needs clothes, he will buy them. You spend time figuring out what's "in fashion" and shopping sales for him BECAUSE YOU WANT TO. Stop trying to make these tasks you HAVE to do. Honestly, you sound like the husband who added "get birth certificate" to his list of tasks. |
I think you aren’t talking about millennials. |