Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good idea to call during the commute or set a daily time. We had this, think a lot of people do. Think fully wfh people sometimes forget the energy that’s exerted in all ways during an in office day.
And people who don't WFH don't understand the isolation. The idea that WFH is just an amazing experience is false. Full time WFH is really hard.
Anonymous wrote:Tell me you are a healthcare provider without telling me you are a healthcare provider. This narcissistic approach of seeing your job as more important than his is toxic and would poison your life and marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Tell me you are a healthcare provider without telling me you are a healthcare provider. This narcissistic approach of seeing your job as more important than his is toxic and would poison your life and marriage.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with calling during the commute and letting him vent then. He doesn’t actually want you to solve his problems! Of course you can’t do anything about it. He just wants to talk about them.
Then when you get home try and get 15-30 min of relaxation before you have to do other things.
Dh works from home and I’m an overstimulated teacher. When I get home, however, I can’t rest I have to start cooking dinner for the family.
After dinner I sometimes look myself in my room for decompression time. Even if you can’t get it right away, try to make it happen. Even 15 minutes can help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good idea to call during the commute or set a daily time. We had this, think a lot of people do. Think fully wfh people sometimes forget the energy that’s exerted in all ways during an in office day.
And people who don't WFH don't understand the isolation. The idea that WFH is just an amazing experience is false. Full time WFH is really hard. Most people would find best with a flexible schedule and the option to WFH when needed, but also an office to go to.
I get why OP is annoyed but the lack of empathy for her partner is concerning. He's obviously talking to her because he isn't getting enough human interaction during the day, and it's making him lonely plus short-circuiting his social skills. OP is only looking at this from her perspective, like he's not a person with feelings and needs. They need to talk it out respectfully and find a compromise.
Anonymous wrote:Just park one street over or sit in the driveway and white knuckle it until you can get past the dread of walking in the front door.
It’s pretty common.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe this is just a rant. But DH gets up when he wants, works in his bathrobe all day, and finishes whenever the work is done. I work 8-12 hr shifts, not including a 30 minute commute, at a very stressful job.
When I get home, I just want to be left alone. I'm usually hungry and just want to have something to eat and some quiet.
But no, DH needs to hit me with every problem the second I get home, before I can even eat. Then he gets angry because I don't want to talk about problems right then and says I don't care enough about whatever it is that is upsetting him that day (which is almost always something I can't do anything about anyway).
So basically, he ruins my evenings and I'm just mad about it. Sometimes I think about getting divorced just so I can go home and relax instead of having to evenings listening to him complain and then be expected to fix everything.
Anonymous wrote:Good idea to call during the commute or set a daily time. We had this, think a lot of people do. Think fully wfh people sometimes forget the energy that’s exerted in all ways during an in office day.