Anonymous wrote:OP - this happened with my and my DH pre-baby. I nipped it in the bud and I am so glad I did. I pointed out he didn't thank me for doing things around the house... Why? Because he expected me to do it and it was a minimum expectation for living in a space and taking care of it. Same for him. It's no more my 'job' than it is his. I expect him to be a decent human/partner/roommate, and I won't be thanking him like he did me some sort of favor. He heard me and has been more attentive ever since. Now post-baby we have a pretty explicit divide of who does what so if one of us steps in to help the other we do thank each other.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I thank each other daily for tasks big and small.
Anonymous wrote:It has to do with his love language. He's trying to show you that he's doing more. If a man empties a dishwasher and no one sees it, did it really happen?
DH and I both say thank you often to each other and both of us often feel appreciated. Thank you goes a long way.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I thank each other daily for tasks big and small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We thank each other for the things we do - even though they are our responsibilities. It would really irritate me if the thanking was one-sided.
This. DH thanks me pretty regularly for everything I do for the kids and I thank him about as much for stuff around the house and busting his @ss at the office. I think It's important to recognize the contributions both of us are making to keep our family running - a lot of it is thankless work so it helps to have your partner recognize it.
Anonymous wrote:We thank each other, we thank the dog, we thank the kids - and guess what? The kids are pretty good about saying thank you without prompting. This is the easiest thing in the world and may matter more to some people than others, but it really hurts no one.
Now apologizing? Not as smooth in our family!