Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Nothing good to share.
DH continued to prioritize his work above all else. He needed "rest" during off hours, which I was never given despite a more demanding job situation (and more $$$). He resented my work and only saw that I was slacking off at home. It didn't matter that my job paid the bills. He saw himself as "head of household." He's XH now.
OP. My husband is like this. I pick kids up, make dinner, bath/bedtime routine with kids. Then after they're in bed I come back downstairs to clean the kitchen and tend to any laundry that needs folding & take the dog for a walk.. He comes home, has dinner, and then watches tv. I sucked it up when I had an easy job. Now that I have a high-stress gig with more hours I want him to pitch in more. It doesn't seem fair to me that I both support the family financially ... especially since his work has slowed down considerably over the past year.. AND do everything else.
Maybe it wouldn't bother me so much if he didn't complain about the household "slipping" since I started the new gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Nothing good to share.
DH continued to prioritize his work above all else. He needed "rest" during off hours, which I was never given despite a more demanding job situation (and more $$$). He resented my work and only saw that I was slacking off at home. It didn't matter that my job paid the bills. He saw himself as "head of household." He's XH now.
OP. My husband is like this. I pick kids up, make dinner, bath/bedtime routine with kids. Then after they're in bed I come back downstairs to clean the kitchen and tend to any laundry that needs folding & take the dog for a walk.. He comes home, has dinner, and then watches tv. I sucked it up when I had an easy job. Now that I have a high-stress gig with more hours I want him to pitch in more. It doesn't seem fair to me that I both support the family financially ... especially since his work has slowed down considerably over the past year.. AND do everything else.
Maybe it wouldn't bother me so much if he didn't complain about the household "slipping" since I started the new gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its not about salary IMO its about hours you are home. Whoever is home more usually ends up doing more housework...duh. And BTW my husband would love it if I outlearned him because "more money is more money!"
This! If you are looking at it from a money perspective, you are bound to fail. And annoy the hell out of your spouse. Hours in the home, minus work at home time, matter.
You guys are partners, not competitors.
I agree with this as well. I earn slightly more but he has a less flexible job. I also have a significant inheritance that paid off the house, his school loans, etc. I'm home more so I do most domestic stuff - meet contractors, laundry, cleaning etc. He does all trash, his laundry, makes kids' beds etc. We have cleaners 2x/week. I cook and he does dishes. Equality makes a happy marriage IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its not about salary IMO its about hours you are home. Whoever is home more usually ends up doing more housework...duh. And BTW my husband would love it if I outlearned him because "more money is more money!"
This! If you are looking at it from a money perspective, you are bound to fail. And annoy the hell out of your spouse. Hours in the home, minus work at home time, matter.
You guys are partners, not competitors.
Anonymous wrote:Its not about salary IMO its about hours you are home. Whoever is home more usually ends up doing more housework...duh. And BTW my husband would love it if I outlearned him because "more money is more money!"
Anonymous wrote:Its not about salary IMO its about hours you are home. Whoever is home more usually ends up doing more housework...duh. And BTW my husband would love it if I outlearned him because "more money is more money!"
Anonymous wrote:Does he take on more domestic leadership?
We just embarked of a bit of a role reversal in our household. First 6 years of marriage I took the low stress job and managed more of the domestic responsibilities. I recently accepted a more challenging role with greater responsibilities. My husband supported and encouraged the move but he's not really picking up any additional household duties. I've spoken directly with him about this but it seems that while he is supportive of women in leadership, women as primary breadwinners, etc, in principle -- in practice, he's not thrilled about the change in dynamic. The most he's willing to pick up is splitting pick up/drop off duties which he treats as some herculean assistance instead of just the starting point.
If you've experienced this, can you provide advice?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a DH who makes more (3x's) than my wife (a teacher) but we absolutely divide things up by time. I have a more flexible job so I do the pick ups and drop offs since I don't have a firm "start time" at work or "end time." DW gets home an hour before we do. She usually gets dinner started, walks the dog, and does a 30 minute exercise video. We are both otherwise hands on. I do the teacher work day and sick days usually since I have 6 weeks of paid vacation and 4 weeks of sick leave a year. DW gets 12 days. Total.
During the summer, DW does more with the kids. I am using training for a marathon, so she ends up doing pick ups and is around to handle a lot of the house stuff.
Truthfully, OP it's a question of time more than money. Who has it should be the biggest indicator or who takes on the work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Nothing good to share.
DH continued to prioritize his work above all else. He needed "rest" during off hours, which I was never given despite a more demanding job situation (and more $$$). He resented my work and only saw that I was slacking off at home. It didn't matter that my job paid the bills. He saw himself as "head of household." He's XH now.
OP. My husband is like this. I pick kids up, make dinner, bath/bedtime routine with kids. Then after they're in bed I come back downstairs to clean the kitchen and tend to any laundry that needs folding & take the dog for a walk.. He comes home, has dinner, and then watches tv. I sucked it up when I had an easy job. Now that I have a high-stress gig with more hours I want him to pitch in more. It doesn't seem fair to me that I both support the family financially ... especially since his work has slowed down considerably over the past year.. AND do everything else.
Maybe it wouldn't bother me so much if he didn't complain about the household "slipping" since I started the new gig.