What would "more courtesy" look like? I thought OP was upset because there is too much courtesy, so it looks like a coworker. BTW, this sort of disagreement about "courtesy" usually happens because the wider context lacks intimacy. For a marriage to man, that usually means physical affection is absent. |
Why are you so resistant to being told you need to take care of adult tasks? Honestly your partner should be upset they have to send this at all. |
Sometimes a task is just transactional. We aren't laying the grass clippings on the flowerbeds and making love on them. |
It's not an order - "I am directing you to take out the trash." But it's not a request, either, in that it's not optional. The trash needs to be taken out, you can't decide not to do it. It's a notification that it's trash day, and a reminder that the trash needs to be taken out. That's it. I agree with the PP - I don't need (or want) a lot of schmoopie stuff during the daily grind of life, but if you do, communicate your needs. |
| OP when you take the bins out, grab a handful of grass clippings and sprinkle them in a heart shape on the street. Take a picture with your phone and send it. |
|
Seems entirely normal in any relationship where it's understood that someone has to take out the trash?
Either my husband or I could send this to each other or my teen son. My daughter is a little young to take out the large trash cans. |
| were |
| If you consider that the alternative to a polite text is your SO taking the trash out, being a bit late for work, and being slightly mad at you for not doing it, you're coming out ahead here. |
| Honestly I get OP feeling a bit huffed about it, but the hyperbolic way the post was written suggest that OP has much deeper pent up frustrations than just one faux pas text. |
NP, but in my house it would read something like "hey, sweetheart, could you take the trash out please? Also there's those grass clippings. Thanks, I love you!" |
| Good god OP. It's just f'king trash. Take it out and be done with it. |
| I'm a DW and I would have no problem receiving this text. We often work together to put out the trash and recycling the night before but if we're too tired he will usually take care of it early the next morning. I'd just assume DH forgot in his rush to get out the door. |
The person who wrote that text to you at 6 a.m. is wrong, not you. Period. |
At my house: Don't forget trash Later on: You forgot the grass clippings
There would be no hurt feelings but maybe because we are never condescending or demanding in person so we wouldn't read each other's texts like that. This text could go from dh to dw or the other way just as easily. |
Of course, I was just pointing out what "more courtesy" looks like, at least to me. We also talk like this to each other in person all the time, and don't ever really have conflicts over communication. |