Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH did this for years. No matter how upset I got or how much I explained how important it was for me to feel safe at night knowing the doors are locked, he couldn’t make the effort because it wasn’t important to him. We’re getting divorced.
I feel like this is my life. Can you share more?
Sure. It didn’t matter that his refusal to reliably lock the doors made me feel dismissed, not listened to, not valued, or like a nag for bringing it up when he failed to do it and I came down in the morning and found our doors unlocked and got upset. This was just one of many examples of this type of disregard. If something wasn’t important to him, it wasn’t important at all.
Anonymous wrote:We have an electronic lock that locks itself after 5 minutes. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH did this for years. No matter how upset I got or how much I explained how important it was for me to feel safe at night knowing the doors are locked, he couldn’t make the effort because it wasn’t important to him. We’re getting divorced.
I feel like this is my life. Can you share more?
Sure. It didn’t matter that his refusal to reliably lock the doors made me feel dismissed, not listened to, not valued, or like a nag for bringing it up when he failed to do it and I came down in the morning and found our doors unlocked and got upset. This was just one of many examples of this type of disregard. If something wasn’t important to him, it wasn’t important at all.
But if it was that Important to you, why didn’t YOU solve the problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH did this for years. No matter how upset I got or how much I explained how important it was for me to feel safe at night knowing the doors are locked, he couldn’t make the effort because it wasn’t important to him. We’re getting divorced.
I feel like this is my life. Can you share more?
Sure. It didn’t matter that his refusal to reliably lock the doors made me feel dismissed, not listened to, not valued, or like a nag for bringing it up when he failed to do it and I came down in the morning and found our doors unlocked and got upset. This was just one of many examples of this type of disregard. If something wasn’t important to him, it wasn’t important at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH did this for years. No matter how upset I got or how much I explained how important it was for me to feel safe at night knowing the doors are locked, he couldn’t make the effort because it wasn’t important to him. We’re getting divorced.
I feel like this is my life. Can you share more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the father and man of the house, it is most certainly HIS obligation to secure house to protect his family. Can't believe he blows it off like that.
I’m the DW and I do all the locking up at night. Husband forgets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happens here too. It means, among other things, that I am always the primary caretaker of all, that I can never rest, much less go to bed earlier than anyone, and I must think of everything at all hours since my spouse doesn't consider this, or most things, important.
Any why doesn't he? Here is the larger problem.
Unlocked door at night? We've had numerous home invasions over a period of time in my general area. Yes, and resulting in murder. Still makes no difference some people!
Wow. And a locked door was the difference?
I live in an area where we don't sweat it if the doors aren't locked. There have been no invasions like that in the 20 years we have lived here.
Our cars typically aren't locked, either.
Anonymous wrote:Happens here too. It means, among other things, that I am always the primary caretaker of all, that I can never rest, much less go to bed earlier than anyone, and I must think of everything at all hours since my spouse doesn't consider this, or most things, important.
Any why doesn't he? Here is the larger problem.
Unlocked door at night? We've had numerous home invasions over a period of time in my general area. Yes, and resulting in murder. Still makes no difference some people!
Anonymous wrote:My DH did this for years. No matter how upset I got or how much I explained how important it was for me to feel safe at night knowing the doors are locked, he couldn’t make the effort because it wasn’t important to him. We’re getting divorced.
Anonymous wrote:As the father and man of the house, it is most certainly HIS obligation to secure house to protect his family. Can't believe he blows it off like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One way to solve this would be to get those knobs that auto-lock. It'll close money but solve a problem.
This. Better yet, one of the digital locks. That way, it auto-locks AND he can't lock himself out.
Yes! We stayed in a vacation house that had a digital lock with a code we punched in to enter. You can reprogram the code. It was great. The door locked automatically and we punched in some numbers to enter -no key needed. This sounds perfect for op. I think op's peace of mind is worth the cost of a locksmith to install a digital lock. You may have to do all entry doors, though!