Anonymous wrote:Why don't people just fucking get a maid service?? Save your marriage.
And don't tell me you don't have the money, it's cheaper than therapy and lawyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Divorcee here. This was a battle my ex and I had. Our marriage counselor suggested, as a PP did, that it was not about the chores but about deeper issues in the relationship. I thought she was wrong at the time but now with some distance and hindsight I think she was right.
Sometimes this fight probably really is about the cleaning and getting things done. In that situation a cleaning service would help immensely.
However, in our case, and probably many others, the underlying issue was that my ex was checked out of the relationship and not contributing in many ways. I felt lonely and unsupported. The fact that he would say he would do x and then not do it was just a manifestation of the bigger issue, the lack of support and loneliness. Getting a cleaning service (which we actually did) does not help with that.
Another divorcee here. This was an issue in my first marriage too, exactly the way you put it. I also felt (perhaps unfairly) that his suggestion of us getting a cleaning service rather than just helping himself was a manifestation of his lack of interest in our collective life. It's a perfectly rational solution to a problem of cleaning, but it seemed to me that it was another way for him to not deal with an issue he was contributing to, to make that someone else's responsibility.
That said, having someone come in and mop floors and do detailed cleaning of bathroom and such was (and is) great. The day our cleaners come, the house just feels better to me. I swear the light looks different on those days
Yes, I have totally lived this. After major fights, I am just trying to get through.
PP, what I am trying to do now is find every hack around the situation possible: for example, I've started filling the sink full of hot water and clearing everything there. Then loading the dishes after bedtime is easier. Sink needs to be cleaned more, and it gets gross, but with gloves and some good tunes, its just a couple of minutes. In the morning I unload the dishwasher while the coffee is brewing, and make it into a game to get it done while the coffee is just trickling out. I use this type of strategy with my children as well, to make picking out clothes the night before and cleaning up a game, Sure, it only works part of the time, but I just try to live with the rest. I married a nasty slob, who totally hid his stripes til well into our first or second year of marriage. for us wives, its the equivalent of gaining 40 or 50 lbs after you get married.
Anonymous wrote:Our house is such a mess that we can't even have a maid service come in!! There's junk all over the floors and every surface in every room. There are unfinished projects everywhere. I start them, buy the materials, get out the tools, and then DH watches TV or reads a book or says he's too tired, and that's the end of it. I just found black mold growing on the wallpaper backing in the kids' bathroom that DH was supposed to remove six months ago! It's a messy, tedious job that he doesn't want to do! So he always finds other things to do, does the laundry, washes the dishes and says he's too busy, too stretched to do any of these household jobs!!! And no, we don't have the money for a maid, DH says. Well, I've tasked myself with getting the crap cleaned up enough so we can have a maid. The dirt is killing me, killing our kids, all of whom have allergies. Is this grounds for divorce?? I'm thinking about it....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Divorcee here. This was a battle my ex and I had. Our marriage counselor suggested, as a PP did, that it was not about the chores but about deeper issues in the relationship. I thought she was wrong at the time but now with some distance and hindsight I think she was right.
Sometimes this fight probably really is about the cleaning and getting things done. In that situation a cleaning service would help immensely.
However, in our case, and probably many others, the underlying issue was that my ex was checked out of the relationship and not contributing in many ways. I felt lonely and unsupported. The fact that he would say he would do x and then not do it was just a manifestation of the bigger issue, the lack of support and loneliness. Getting a cleaning service (which we actually did) does not help with that.
Another divorcee here. This was an issue in my first marriage too, exactly the way you put it. I also felt (perhaps unfairly) that his suggestion of us getting a cleaning service rather than just helping himself was a manifestation of his lack of interest in our collective life. It's a perfectly rational solution to a problem of cleaning, but it seemed to me that it was another way for him to not deal with an issue he was contributing to, to make that someone else's responsibility.
That said, having someone come in and mop floors and do detailed cleaning of bathroom and such was (and is) great. The day our cleaners come, the house just feels better to me. I swear the light looks different on those days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Divorcee here. This was a battle my ex and I had. Our marriage counselor suggested, as a PP did, that it was not about the chores but about deeper issues in the relationship. I thought she was wrong at the time but now with some distance and hindsight I think she was right.
Sometimes this fight probably really is about the cleaning and getting things done. In that situation a cleaning service would help immensely.
However, in our case, and probably many others, the underlying issue was that my ex was checked out of the relationship and not contributing in many ways. I felt lonely and unsupported. The fact that he would say he would do x and then not do it was just a manifestation of the bigger issue, the lack of support and loneliness. Getting a cleaning service (which we actually did) does not help with that.
Another divorcee here. This was an issue in my first marriage too, exactly the way you put it. I also felt (perhaps unfairly) that his suggestion of us getting a cleaning service rather than just helping himself was a manifestation of his lack of interest in our collective life. It's a perfectly rational solution to a problem of cleaning, but it seemed to me that it was another way for him to not deal with an issue he was contributing to, to make that someone else's responsibility.
That said, having someone come in and mop floors and do detailed cleaning of bathroom and such was (and is) great. The day our cleaners come, the house just feels better to me. I swear the light looks different on those days