Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll never understand how people in healthy marriages think keeping score is a good thing.
Same here. And 150 items? Wow. That is nuts. Maybe if the list only had 20 items, that would make sense, but if you're getting into the minutiae, you are trying too hard to prove a point--that you are resentful that your DH doesn't recognize your worth.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that things should be balanced. I just would never do what you did. It is just too controlling. I guess if it works with your DHs personality, great but it wouldn't fly with mine. Besides I just don't want to be the one pulling all those strings and then you will by default be the one to "enforce" when he doesn't do his scheduled task. The whole thing sounds shitty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll never understand how people in healthy marriages think keeping score is a good thing.
Same here. And 150 items? Wow. That is nuts. Maybe if the list only had 20 items, that would make sense, but if you're getting into the minutiae, you are trying too hard to prove a point--that you are resentful that your DH doesn't recognize your worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This system works great for us. It isn't keeping score, it's designing a system that is fundamentally fair.
People who accuse others of keeping score usually aren't pulling their own weight.
Why does it have to be fundamentally fair? I'm the default parent because I have the more flexible job. If I demanded DH do equal tasks, it would eat up our family weekend time. How is that fair to the family?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a reasonable approach as it considers both the volume of work and the importance of the work. Perhaps you guys will decide certain items can be removed from the list and you can reallocate the remaining items. The only thing I would add is give your DH the opportunity to add things to the list that he might be doing that you don't realize.
Anonymous wrote:Who are all these people who can't seem to buy shoes or birthday presents? Honestly, with Zappos and Amazon it takes me about an hour a year. Until I read DCUM it never occurred to me that this was a challenginf and time consuming chore!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This system works great for us. It isn't keeping score, it's designing a system that is fundamentally fair.
People who accuse others of keeping score usually aren't pulling their own weight.
Why does it have to be fundamentally fair? I'm the default parent because I have the more flexible job. If I demanded DH do equal tasks, it would eat up our family weekend time. How is that fair to the family?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go OP! I think what helps us is being 50/50 on the major items like daycare drop off/pickup and putting dd to bed. I take on tasks I think are fun (birthday present shopping, clothes shopping, cleaning the house) and he takes on ones he likes too (cooking, taking dd to the park, pediatrician visits). We reevaluate whenever one of us is treading water or upset.
This is OP. Your approach is what I am trying to emulate. I don't know why but we haven't had an actual conversation about how we split things up for a long time. Instead every so often I get mad at him about it, which is obviously not productive. I think talking it through is going to help a lot.
Anonymous wrote:This system works great for us. It isn't keeping score, it's designing a system that is fundamentally fair.
People who accuse others of keeping score usually aren't pulling their own weight.
Anonymous wrote:I'll never understand how people in healthy marriages think keeping score is a good thing.