Anonymous wrote:How do I bring this up without getting into a fight? I have waited to see what he would do, and apparently, that answer is - he will do absolutely NOTHING. I'm still working fulltime and going in-office and taking care of everything the kids need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's just been a few days. I would let them have downtime for a week before I start complaining
She is not “composite ing.”
She is suggesting a fair and logical division of labor. The family should operate as a unit.
Anonymous wrote:It's just been a few days. I would let them have downtime for a week before I start complaining
Anonymous wrote:It's just been a few days. I would let them have downtime for a week before I start complaining
Anonymous wrote:Do you mean daily stuff (laundry, dinner, pick up the kids) or big projects?
I think it's totally fine to ask for more help with the daily stuff, although I wouldn't say "it's all yours now" and just completely walk away. I'm furloughed and I'm doing more of that than normal, but haven't taken on 100% of my DH's responsibilities. He's still a parent and it's still a 2 person job.
For big projects, I'd tread carefully. We don't know how long this will last. I've tried to do some decluttering and consignment, and I hate it SO MUCH that I have had to work out hard to calm down after. It makes me mad that I'm spending so many hours trying to make pennies like some poor tradwife instead of using my actual skills to earn our real income.