Ummm, no. The fairly even split would be him also doing 40% of the daily tasks for the kids. Right now he does 0% of that. |
I wish posters would stop with the.....well, you knew this before marrying him/her. That is not true in most cases. It takes people awhile to show their day to day faults, tempers, laziness, insecurities, etc. Stop saying that. It’s no help whatsoever.....just blaming the OP. |
Then, I wouldn’t remind him nor do it for him. He can make a special trip another day. |
| As soon as my youngest left for college, I divorced DH. Problem solved. |
Thank you. You can't see into the future. And people change. And when you are IN LOVE with them, their faults don't seem that glaring. And when you don't have children together ... so much easier!!!! |
I agree! (New poster) It is so easy to take care of a household of 2 adults. H was moderately helpful, I enjoyed doing what I was doing, I thought we had it figured out. Ultimately I don’t think there is a way to radically transform a person once the roles are established after kids. It’s cost benefit analysis all the way. Ultimately there were more costs than benefits from my ex (heck, the only benefit was his income which he let me have less and less say in spending - so divorce ultimately made sense for me. I would run a basic CBA. I have a friend who complains about her H but she does not realize he does a ton of drop offs and pickups. |
| Whose. Not who’s. You sound dim. |
Is the the only error in the post? Or is it the only one you were bright enough to notice? |
100% this and most other women on this board. |
+1 He's not participating mentally. The household stuff is one thing because it's obvious. You drop the ball on the kids, then they suffer. No book fair, no spelling practice, no homework, no permission slips... The dad needs to participate mentally. |
That's my DH. I literally get sick to my stomach thinking about how many thousands of dollars he hasn't been reimbursed for because he simply couldn't be bothered to do them. |
1) If you want to deal with the overall balance of tasks, deal with it directly and not by trash/recycling proxy. 2) In this kind of situation I would say “when you forgot to take out the trash and said “you didn’t remind me” I thought that meant that you want me to remind you. Do you want me to remind you? If he says the thing about “not when I’m in the middle of something” say, well, I can remind you when I think of you or not remind you at all, but I’m not going to wait around until it seems like you’re doing nothing to remind you. So do you want reminders or not? If he says no, then no reminders. If he forgets and again says “you didn’t remind me” then you say - look, it bothers me when you say I didn’t remind you but you also said you don’t actually want reminders. Can you just not do that? Personally, if he’s said he doesn’t want reminders and then still says “you didn’t remind me” he’s either joking (in a way that may annoy you, but still it’s a joke) or he’s purposefully needling you to upset you, which is a bigger relationship issue. |
+2 |
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Inattentive ADD?
I can remind my ex a dozen times about something - in several different formats (email, text, in person, phone) and he will still forget it. Consequently, for anything important (camp signups, school registration, doctor's appts, etc.) I take responsibility. At one point he was calling me every night to ask what the school lunch was, until he finally figured out that he could download the app himself and look it up. He'll still text me to ask me when/where basketball practice is, when he's been the one taking her to practice for the last two months. These are his limitations. I accept them. It's annoying, but it's our reality. It's not worth fighting about. I save my battles for the other stuff. |
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You aren't the only one.
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