Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's hard to know, without hearing his side. How many hours do you work each week? Maybe he feels like the total number of hours each of you are putting in is more equal than you are thinking. Maybe you could make a list of chores and divide it out more equitably.
He does very little chores and I'm generally fine with that. He takes out the trash and recycling, he loads his own laundry into the washer, and he *usually* empties the dishwasher in the morning, he handles our investments, and 2 years ago, he finally took over doing our taxes because I stopped working. I do EVERYTHING else. Would it be nice if he helped clean up after dinner - yes, but that's my only semi-complaint.
The real problem is his anger annoyance at me for not prioritizing the home maintenance/improvements to his level of satisfaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t know that there is a right or wrong. But it would annoy me too if I were expected to do the things I’m not good at while I was pulling my weight in terms of family responsibilities. Maybe there is some compromise like one of you make the calls and the other manage the projects. We just did this in our house and it worked out well. I made the calls and set the appointments because I’m good at that and my spouse is managing the project because she has a strong opinion on what she wants
This is actually what we used to do. The problem with this arrangement was that he’d find a random contractor, and while they satisfied DH’s criteria in that they could start within a few days, they were often bad contractors. And I’d have to deal with the problems.
I like to do a bit more research, get referrals. And the issue with this has been, the good contractors are very busy and booked and things take longer, or they don’t want to take small jobs because it isn’t worth their time. Also sometimes, even with research, you still sometimes just get a pretty unreliable contractor. Argh honestly I hate the whole process.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t know that there is a right or wrong. But it would annoy me too if I were expected to do the things I’m not good at while I was pulling my weight in terms of family responsibilities. Maybe there is some compromise like one of you make the calls and the other manage the projects. We just did this in our house and it worked out well. I made the calls and set the appointments because I’m good at that and my spouse is managing the project because she has a strong opinion on what she wants
Anonymous wrote:He is treating you like one of his employees. In my house this would 100% guarantee that he handles the renovation or whatever else he is bitching about. I bet he carries a lot of resentment from you quitting your job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What are the renovations he wants done?
Honestly, this seems like a bad idea unless there’s something really unlivable about your house. It’s not a huge risk, but it’s a pointless one.
Yeah nothing near unlivable. Just mostly nice to have improvements we had been talking about before the pandemic hit - added lighting, repairing electrical in the attic, new flooring, new deck.
Anonymous wrote:
What are the renovations he wants done?
Honestly, this seems like a bad idea unless there’s something really unlivable about your house. It’s not a huge risk, but it’s a pointless one.
Anonymous wrote:For me, the issue is that he doesn't get to identify your priorities. Household priorities should be a joint decision. He's not your boss, he's your partner. You may, perhaps, have accepted these tasks in the past but roles/tasks in a marriage are always up for renegotiation when it's not working for one partner. In this odd time, we are all strained in ways we previously weren't. I would say your DH is less impacted than you since he still leaves the house for work while you now have the kids for DL when you used to be home alone or with fewer kids.
My advice is to wait until there's a moment of calm and have this discussion. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:For me, the issue is that he doesn't get to identify your priorities. Household priorities should be a joint decision. He's not your boss, he's your partner. You may, perhaps, have accepted these tasks in the past but roles/tasks in a marriage are always up for renegotiation when it's not working for one partner. In this odd time, we are all strained in ways we previously weren't. I would say your DH is less impacted than you since he still leaves the house for work while you now have the kids for DL when you used to be home alone or with fewer kids.
My advice is to wait until there's a moment of calm and have this discussion. Good luck.