Anonymous wrote:During the day I was feeling it and thought DH and I would have sex tonight.
Then I spent an hour driving home from work, ordered things from amazon during commute for kids' bday party this weekend, picked up the dog, picked up the kids (5 and 3) one of whom had a meltdown because her snack was in wrong container, came home to other dog, fed dogs, fed kids, facetimed with 5 different relatives for 5 year old's birthday, wrangled kids to bath and bed, cleaned playroom, cleaned books off their floor, cleaned dishes, cooked dinner, cleaned up more dishes and pots after dinner, finished decluttering house, broke down boxes and gathered trash/recycling to put to curb, and washed a load of laundry.
It is 20 minutes to midnight (I live in central time) and I am just now sitting down for the first time all night. During all that, DH came home with balloons for the kids, exercised, had dinner with me, watched tv, answered some work emails. He went to bed about 20 minutes ago after a shower.
I don't even know if I'm posting to ask a question or vent or what, but it's disappointing and frustrating.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks to everyone. This has been very helpful. -OP

Anonymous wrote:Where do you find these husbands? Not gonna lie, I'm a fairly conservative husband. My wife stays home and I work long hours (including a prior stint in big law). Nobody would ever label me feminist.
If I'm home and awake, I'm constantly working around the house. Bedtime and shower routine with the kids always falls to me, weekend breakfast and lunch are always on me. My wife trains for half marathons and Saturday mornings are her long run day with her running group. Always get the kids out of the house for a couple hours on Saturday so she can nap. Homework, especially math and reading, are my territory. Watching a college football game on Saturday? Great time to fold laundry.
I'll own the fact that I rarely wake up in the middle of the night with the kids, but that's also a function of the fact that I often get as little as four hours of sleep a night and my wife doesn't want me to wake up.
Are the chores divided evenly in my house? No, but I do everything I can do and usually my wife and I get to enjoy a quiet hour together most nights after the kids are asleep.
OP: most big law associates learn early on (especially if they are in corporate) that business hours are for working on what other people want them to work on and pre/after business hours are for working on what the lawyer wants to work on. Generalize the concept to your home life: if the kids are awake, unless he's working for money, he's doing what others need him to do.
Also, tell him the early mornings are for working out.
Anonymous wrote:I kinda feel for you, OP. And I say this as a man who went through a loooong stretch of sex starved marriage. And by sex starved, I mean your frequency, 2-3x a month and my DW starfished for most of it.
So I bet your husband saw your text cynically. Yeah, sure, he thinks. She says she wants sex, but she says it when there is no possibility of sex, i.e. when you are remote from where he is.
Then you come home, and its the priority list, of where he comes dead last. Which isn't to say 1) you had legit things you needed to do, or 2) he should have stepped up to help regardless of whether sex was on the table. But forgive him for knowing that after the hectic day, which was going to end close to midnight, on a school night, that if he made a move it would have been rejected. Because it would have. Because you were tired by then and resentful.
You got a big problem on your hand. You aren't communicating. You also aren't having as much sex as you should to keep your marriage happy. Which is why I think you should schedule a day, when you two can focus on each other, early, as a priority, not as another thing on your to-do list at the end of the night.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you find these husbands? Not gonna lie, I'm a fairly conservative husband. My wife stays home and I work long hours (including a prior stint in big law). Nobody would ever label me feminist.
If I'm home and awake, I'm constantly working around the house. Bedtime and shower routine with the kids always falls to me, weekend breakfast and lunch are always on me. My wife trains for half marathons and Saturday mornings are her long run day with her running group. Always get the kids out of the house for a couple hours on Saturday so she can nap. Homework, especially math and reading, are my territory. Watching a college football game on Saturday? Great time to fold laundry.
I'll own the fact that I rarely wake up in the middle of the night with the kids, but that's also a function of the fact that I often get as little as four hours of sleep a night and my wife doesn't want me to wake up.
Are the chores divided evenly in my house? No, but I do everything I can do and usually my wife and I get to enjoy a quiet hour together most nights after the kids are asleep.
OP: most big law associates learn early on (especially if they are in corporate) that business hours are for working on what other people want them to work on and pre/after business hours are for working on what the lawyer wants to work on. Generalize the concept to your home life: if the kids are awake, unless he's working for money, he's doing what others need him to do.
Also, tell him the early mornings are for working out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do you find these husbands? Not gonna lie, I'm a fairly conservative husband. My wife stays home and I work long hours (including a prior stint in big law). Nobody would ever label me feminist.
If I'm home and awake, I'm constantly working around the house. Bedtime and shower routine with the kids always falls to me, weekend breakfast and lunch are always on me. My wife trains for half marathons and Saturday mornings are her long run day with her running group. Always get the kids out of the house for a couple hours on Saturday so she can nap. Homework, especially math and reading, are my territory. Watching a college football game on Saturday? Great time to fold laundry.
I'll own the fact that I rarely wake up in the middle of the night with the kids, but that's also a function of the fact that I often get as little as four hours of sleep a night and my wife doesn't want me to wake up.
Are the chores divided evenly in my house? No, but I do everything I can do and usually my wife and I get to enjoy a quiet hour together most nights after the kids are asleep.
OP: most big law associates learn early on (especially if they are in corporate) that business hours are for working on what other people want them to work on and pre/after business hours are for working on what the lawyer wants to work on. Generalize the concept to your home life: if the kids are awake, unless he's working for money, he's doing what others need him to do.
Also, tell him the early mornings are for working out.
You seem like a great DH. Bravo!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a cleaner coming but prioritized cleaning for the cleaner above spending quality time with your husband. He's not the only one to blame for what happened.
You're ridiculous. If you don't declutter before the cleaners come, nothing gets cleaned and it's a waste of money.
They clean the house, they don't put away your stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, no one is a mind reader. Simply say, "I am doing the dishes, can you do the laundry right now?"
I get your point but I have to ask him to do some of the chores, all of the time. All of the time. Why is it that I need to ask him, despite us having this larger conversation over and over? That is what is so frustrating. I have to ask every time I need help, and I feel like a nagging wife. I get tired of feeling like a nag.
And yes, I've said those things to him.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you find these husbands? Not gonna lie, I'm a fairly conservative husband. My wife stays home and I work long hours (including a prior stint in big law). Nobody would ever label me feminist.
If I'm home and awake, I'm constantly working around the house. Bedtime and shower routine with the kids always falls to me, weekend breakfast and lunch are always on me. My wife trains for half marathons and Saturday mornings are her long run day with her running group. Always get the kids out of the house for a couple hours on Saturday so she can nap. Homework, especially math and reading, are my territory. Watching a college football game on Saturday? Great time to fold laundry.
I'll own the fact that I rarely wake up in the middle of the night with the kids, but that's also a function of the fact that I often get as little as four hours of sleep a night and my wife doesn't want me to wake up.
Are the chores divided evenly in my house? No, but I do everything I can do and usually my wife and I get to enjoy a quiet hour together most nights after the kids are asleep.
OP: most big law associates learn early on (especially if they are in corporate) that business hours are for working on what other people want them to work on and pre/after business hours are for working on what the lawyer wants to work on. Generalize the concept to your home life: if the kids are awake, unless he's working for money, he's doing what others need him to do.
Also, tell him the early mornings are for working out.