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When i got up this morning or should I say noon
breakfast was cooked for the week and in containers cats fed, litter cleaned, bathroom floor mopped laundry done lunch done not only did my husband make his bed he washed his bedding he always puts gas in the vehicle, I have never done it went to the store I have never taken out the garbage or put the bin to the road he is now currently napping, a well deserved nap all of the above he does on his own. I never have to ask. I tell him he's a good wife. He laughs. I am extremely blessed to have him for my husband. I thank God everyday for giving him to me. |
My husband is just an accountant for the government but has the same mentality. |
| Sit down and think about what tasks will work well for him. Things where he himself feels swift consequences if he drops the ball. Reduce nagging by uncrossing your lanes and simplifying your home and your schedule. |
Yes this. But I will also say, pulling his weight is kind of ingrained in my DH. But not about *everything*. So he will take care of the cars without issue, the outside stuff, the trash/recycling with NO problem. I did outsource the house linens to him too and he's done great with that. But will he clean a bathroom? No it would literally have to be covered in scum before this would cross his mind. So out chores breakdown is a little sexist, but it works. Oh and he also makes ALL the customer service calls (internet, cell phone issues, etc). We split grocery shopping and cooking, but he does more food shopping and I do more cooking. I'd murder him if he did any less and after writing that I realize he does a lot! SO thanks DH, you rock. I'll stop grumbling about the dishes you left in the sink when the empty dishwasher was RIGHT there. |
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DH is just another child. I had to tell in a stern voice, do it now, no not later. That is the only way things get done.
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Sounds like my 14 year old |
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Basically, if he can see it, my DH is great about dealing with it: dirty dishes and laundry, trash and recycling, empty fridge in need of restocking, dirty diapers in need of changing, naked children who need to be dressed, hungry children clamoring for dinner, empty gas tanks in need of filling, lawns needing mowing, accumulated dog hair needing to be vacuumed.
Where he's not great at is the stuff he can't "see": Bills, scheduling doctor appointments, thinking ahead about kids' clothing for the upcoming season, maintaining the sump pump, getting the chimney cleaned, etc., and things he doesn't see/ notice, like dirty windows, overgrown shrubs, dirty cars, dust, unmade beds, fridge needing cleaning. But I guess that last category falls more under "differences in standards." I take care of most of these things, or prod him until he does them. |
| Yes, he's an adult. |
Bad dynamic. It’s like you think you are in charge and he takes marching orders from you. Fix this now or you will be divorced inside of a decade. |
| "Gas in the car" is not worth 3 discussions. If he runs out of gas, that will get his attention. If you need gas, get your own gas. |
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Sometimes yes and sometimes no. The three things I never have to ask him to do are: grocery shop, make dinner (we share this pretty equitably and both take it on ourselves to plan a couple meals a week), and clean the kitchen. These stay in his head as things he has to do as an adult. He is also thoughtful about making sure the food he buys and prepares will work for everyone in the family.
Other cleaning tasks though? I have to ask. Or make a list and say "This is what needs to get done this week/weekend/before we leave for our trip." I thought that after a while he wouldn't need this anymore because he knows what needs to be done, but 10 years in and he still needs it. He just doesn't know how to prioritize tasks and isn't good at recognizing that something is dirty. I blame his family for never giving him chores as a kid or setting any standards for cleanliness. I think this happens to a lot of men. It sucks. Teach your sons how to clean and that cleaning is something all people have to do. He figured out groceries/cooking/cleaning the kitchen on his own as an adult, because he HAD to eat. All the other stuff is like a foreign custom he is interested in but just never feels natural. |
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Yes, but after many years of “training.”
When you asked him if he still wants to do it or does he want to do it after dinner was the wrong move IMO. I would say, “Why don’t you do it now and you can just relax after dinner?” Or something similar. Basically, discuss with him the pros and cons of doing things sooner vs later. |
I think most people in math related careers are the same. |
| I know exactly what you mean and it is really exhausting. One thing my husband and I have done is divide some chores – he is responsible for all dishes, and I do all the laundry. That is working out because I don’t have to nag him and I don’t have to think about the dishes being done. And he actually does it. Maybe you could assign one or two tasks to him? Sit down and have a conversation about how to get it done. But of course he does still have to do it. |
I have ADHD (diagnosed as an adult), am unmedicated, yet the responsibility falls to me to get things done because if I don't then no one will. I'm tired tired tired of having ALL of the stuff on MY shoulders because there is no one else to pick up the slack. I have no choice so I do it. My husband is an excellent provider but I would love to be able to depend on him for ANYTHING other than earning a living. I found the package of toilet paper I asked him pick up on the way home on the floor in the garage days later. When I asked him about it, he said he was in a rush and just put it there "for now" and was going to get it "later". He always gets annoyed if I mention anything, as if it's normal to drop a package of toilet paper on the garage floor and leave it there and I'm just being a nag. And to be clear, this is everything. He has never planned a vacation, initiated an outing, paid a bill, etc. So someone with ADHD CAN do these things. If they have to. |