Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is the poster mad at her computer programmer husband for only making 120k and being content in his job.
Either way, blaming your husband for your stress is not healthy. You need to take charge of your own choices, and make changes to your own situation. Resenting him for being happier is childish.
My husband is a government worker not a programmer.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is the poster mad at her computer programmer husband for only making 120k and being content in his job.
Either way, blaming your husband for your stress is not healthy. You need to take charge of your own choices, and make changes to your own situation. Resenting him for being happier is childish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand that I have a high stress job and my DH has a low stress (and low paying) job. Why did I do this to myself? I regret marrying him with every bone in my body. Any man who sits and watches his wife endure stress and pressure and is content to take it easy is no man. This is primal and will never change.
Reverse the genders in this. Still true?
I don’t think (straight) men expect to be married to a man with a primal urge to support the family, so…
I agree with this as a man who is the sole breadwinner. Of course, in most families, the man is the one with the high stress job and of the women I know who work with high stress jobs with SAH dads, it rarely works.
It's not fair, men can be just as good at home, but biology seems to play a role here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand that I have a high stress job and my DH has a low stress (and low paying) job. Why did I do this to myself? I regret marrying him with every bone in my body. Any man who sits and watches his wife endure stress and pressure and is content to take it easy is no man. This is primal and will never change.
Reverse the genders in this. Still true?
I don’t think (straight) men expect to be married to a man with a primal urge to support the family, so…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To address the problem, it would probably help to frame it better. Is it really the difference in stress levels? Or is the problem that you are both the primary breadwinner (with all the stress/long hours/etc that comes with it) and doing the lion’s share of the child rearing/housekeeping etc.
I suspect it is the latter. That’s a hard situation to be in. See what you can do to change patterns of who does what. Perhaps counseling? If you don’t have kids, just cut and run.
I personally would not feel better with a husband who did more on the home and kid front so I could endure external stress better. To me, external stress is different than home front stress. I have no problem being busy, dealing with kids, renovations (which I am currently managing actually), etc. If sometiing falls through the cracks, I don’t feel dread about it. If I mess up an important presentation because I am juggling too many things I feel dread because I could lose my job.
I don’t know how other women feel, but this is how I feel. I was told I SHOULDN’T feel this way, and that is why I married my husband when deep down I knew it was a mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand that I have a high stress job and my DH has a low stress (and low paying) job. Why did I do this to myself? I regret marrying him with every bone in my body. Any man who sits and watches his wife endure stress and pressure and is content to take it easy is no man. This is primal and will never change.
This is nuts. My SAHM DW dealt with a house full of rugrats (four under 7) while she was participating in major house renovations. Lots of stress. It ‘s not a reflection on the DH’s manhood that the DW is stressed.
No matter how stressful your job, four kids under 7 years old is WAY more stressful!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand that I have a high stress job and my DH has a low stress (and low paying) job. Why did I do this to myself? I regret marrying him with every bone in my body. Any man who sits and watches his wife endure stress and pressure and is content to take it easy is no man. This is primal and will never change.
This is nuts. My SAHM DW dealt with a house full of rugrats (four under 7) while she was participating in major house renovations. Lots of stress. It ‘s not a reflection on the DH’s manhood that the DW is stressed.
Anonymous wrote:To address the problem, it would probably help to frame it better. Is it really the difference in stress levels? Or is the problem that you are both the primary breadwinner (with all the stress/long hours/etc that comes with it) and doing the lion’s share of the child rearing/housekeeping etc.
I suspect it is the latter. That’s a hard situation to be in. See what you can do to change patterns of who does what. Perhaps counseling? If you don’t have kids, just cut and run.