+1. Don’t do that to someone’s belongings, even if they pissed you off. OP - Do you even remotely like your husband? Because it doesn’t sound like it. I would leave the mess for him to clean up, even if it meant it sat there for the day. |
|
Why not just make taking out trash your thing and ask DH to unload dishwasher for example (or any such household chore) instead?
There's ways to de-escalate situations and choose battles Op. |
| Passive aggressive AF. Why don't you just put the CAN on the back porch? |
This. You seem to care more than him, so why don't you take care of it? |
|
I’d leave the mess for him to clean up.
If he doesn’t clean it up after a couple days, then it’s all fair game. Wipe it up with his jacket, dump it all in his car, throw it in his clothes drawers, whatever. |
|
Leave the trash and engage in a waiting game for him to do something he has proven over and over that he won't? All while the trash disintegrates into harder to pick up pieces? And attracts more animals?
Hell no. Keep going through his favorite things until it danwns on him that you will destroy all his things if he doesnt start respecting you. |
1) Passive: Clean up the mess without saying anything 2) Aggressive: Scream at husband 3) Passive-agressive: Clean it for him but destroy his possession in the process. 4) Assertive: Leave it for him to clean. If he asks you to clean it or complains, calmly explain that you reminded him this was a possible outcome of his choice, and it is his responsibility to deal with the outcome. You are implying that her choice is between 1 and 3, but the mature response is 4 |
|
You're like the kind of person who's kid doesn't brush their hair so you chop it all off and post a video of them sobbing on youtube.
Maybe something happens to you that is wrong, but your response is so cartoonishly bad that you immediately forfeit the moral high ground to become, yes, terrible. |
|
I absolutely would not do that. That is just mean. Plus, a fleece jacket was probably the worst thing you could have used to pick stuff up. No absorbancy.
And I've done some things: Like putting (tossing) shoes outside on the porch if they don't get picked up, like bringing dirty dishes that weren't put into the dishwasher up and into a child's bed (but carefully so no grease, no crumbs!) like turning my husband's ripped shirts that he won't mend into rags. That was just mean, OP. Your DH sounds lazy, and kind of like a jerk, too. But it sounds as if you guys are really feeding off each other. You can't live like this. |
+1. And honesty I'd argue that some version of 2 is a substantially better way to go than 3. My husband and I rarely fight or argue and we even more rarely raise our voices, so if I do snap and yell about something, he hops to attention with lightening speed. Sometimes you do need to SHOW that something is really making you upset (in a non abusive way). |
So why can't OP take over the garbage disposal job and trade a chore she hates with her husband. He does not want to do this chore and it's turned into stupid work for both of them. How freaking hard is it for OP to take thie one over - and give her husband the chore of loading the dishwasher or whatever. |
But you also told him up front that you were a) not okay living in a cluttered home and b) not willing to shoulder the burden of cleaning up his clutter indefinitely so c) you would throw his stuff out. You actually used your words, then followed through with actions. That gave him an opening to say, “I think you are being controlling. I LIKE having all my stuff out.” Or “What if we hire a housekeeper and I agree to tidy once a week before she comes?” Or anything else. Instead he agreed with your premise that he was messy and it’s not your job to clean up and tried to do better and the built-in consequences helped. This is actual communication, not nagging followed by retaliation. |
|
Terrible.
Very immature and kind of crazy. I don't think you should tell anybody in real life that you did this, OP. |
| Another vote for putting a trash can with lid on your porch. |
I would guess he's probably as good at the other chores as he is at taking out the trash. It's likely a problem with everything. OP -- Does he do other chores and complete them? |