Anonymous wrote:(ps ~ don't "prepare" the household for this in order to take your trip)
Anonymous wrote:So stop. You're letting this martyr thing happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds so frustrating. Can you take a trip by yourself and do as little prep as possible for it?
Or the next time you get criticized for missing something say “you’re right, I messed up. I am dropping balls. How about getting b day presents be your job?”
Yes- I'm going to do this at some point this summer. Just truly check out and let him deal. I don't want to be a martyr! Honestly! But it's hard for me to separate the line between "let him deal and figure out dinner/packing kid school bag/logistics of xyz" and "are the kids going to suffer/not have what they need/be where they are supposed to be"
does that make sense?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds so frustrating. Can you take a trip by yourself and do as little prep as possible for it?
Or the next time you get criticized for missing something say “you’re right, I messed up. I am dropping balls. How about getting b day presents be your job?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you considered writing out a list of each task you do and then telling him you're overwhelmed and which tasks would he like to take on to balance the household workload since you're both, at best, equal partners?
We did this once- i asked him to take on dishes and laundry.
The sink is consistently full of dirty dishes. He will do the laundry- but not put it away. For example- he will take kid clothes out of the dryer and throw them on kid's bed. Kid is 2.
It seems like everything ends up being put back on MY to do list. Its lazy at best, rude as f at worst.
I often feel taken advantage of.
Anonymous wrote:Have you considered writing out a list of each task you do and then telling him you're overwhelmed and which tasks would he like to take on to balance the household workload since you're both, at best, equal partners?