Anonymous wrote:IMO children need their parents home more as they get older, not less. There are far more reasons to stay home when the kids are in middle and high school. The activities, extra curricular activities (those that are sanctioned and those that are NOT), etc.
I have teenagers and have no intention of going back to work until my youngest is out of the house. I am sure my husband would LIKE for me to contribute finically but me being home allows him to do his job better — he doesn’t have to schedule meetings, work travel etc around the kids schedules.
Good luck! It can be very tricky if your husband is pressuring you to find a job when you don’t want to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am not worried about divorce, and if I’m wrong we have more than enough assets to divide. Which is part of my frustration about him wanting me to go back. It’s like, “why?” Things are good the way they are.
Anyway I wasn’t really looking to debate it as much as hear from women whose husbands maybe weren’t convinced at first but them changed their minds.
I think you need to focus on the substantive disagreements between you and your DH. He may not think that things are good the way they are. He may not think that your assets are adequate. It sounds like you need to make a very clear case to him that your family is financially on track to meet your agreed-upon goals, and open your mind to the possibility that his goals are different from yours or that his goals have shifted over time.
In my experience there's absolutely no way around this issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your dh’s concern? Would he agree that you have plenty of money?
OP, I think maybe he’s jealous? And also doesn’t understand what having 2 FT working parents is like - we’ve never done it. He doesn’t cook, clean, or shop but somehow magically thinks he will do 50% of this if I go back.
Sit down with your DH and make a chart together listing all of the "to do" items (shopping, cleaning, cooking, driving kids, etc.) and let him sign up for what he'll do. It's got to be very close to 50/50. If he takes a long look at what he's signing up for it may change his mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Umm on weekends I do the yard work, food shopping, cooking for the week, laundry and prepare everyone for the week ahead. I then rely in the work I did in the weekend to get me through my week of working full time and shuttling kids to sports.
I have a hard time fully comprehending how they fill their days if the sole focus is ‘supporting the house and family’.
We spend weekends at our beach house
Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your dh’s concern? Would he agree that you have plenty of money?
OP, I think maybe he’s jealous? And also doesn’t understand what having 2 FT working parents is like - we’ve never done it. He doesn’t cook, clean, or shop but somehow magically thinks he will do 50% of this if I go back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make a list of all the house/kid stuff and have him select the half of the tasks that he will do. (Be sure to divide it into daily, weekly, occasional so he can't take all the occasional tasks like weeding and making drs appts and leave you with dishes and laundry and cleaning).
My suspicion is that he will balk at this. If he says no, then tell him you aren't going to go back because you can't handle everything yourself while working full-time.
If he says ok, then go back to work, but make sure he is handling all his tasks himself. If he is in charge of dishes, and he doesn't do them, they pile up in the sink. If he is in charge of trash, and he doesn't take out the trash, then you have overflowing trash. He will either step up or realize that things are better with you at home.
This is the only way.
I agree this is a good approach but she should be prepared for DH to tell her (hopefully in a loving way) that some of the stuff she fills her days with just isn’t that important and that they can let it slide/relax some standards. Not dishes and garbage, obviously, but maybe (for example) he doesn’t care if they eat pasta and jarred spaghetti sauce with a bagged salad for dinner instead of a scratch-made meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Umm on weekends I do the yard work, food shopping, cooking for the week, laundry and prepare everyone for the week ahead. I then rely in the work I did in the weekend to get me through my week of working full time and shuttling kids to sports.
I have a hard time fully comprehending how they fill their days if the sole focus is ‘supporting the house and family’.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Umm on weekends I do the yard work, food shopping, cooking for the week, laundry and prepare everyone for the week ahead. I then rely in the work I did in the weekend to get me through my week of working full time and shuttling kids to sports.
I have a hard time fully comprehending how they fill their days if the sole focus is ‘supporting the house and family’.
Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I was married to a doctor and stayed home. Worked out to my advantage when he traded me in for a new model. Alimony for life.
And now you don't have to wash his socks either. I divorced my wealthy husband and I will get his retirement since I was the beneficiary, not his current widow. A SAHM is often financially secure. Something many don't understand.
Your last sentence is false and a lie.
The majority of stay at home mothers are not financially secure. The majority of women who marry do not marry men who make six figures; let alone marry men who are wealthy.
Why are you lying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Right, but most responsible, competent adults don’t expect to have a lifetime of weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RE: What do SAHMs do for 6 hours
Well, what do YOU do on the weekends? SAHMs do that. Don't you have any hobbies? Do you read, work out, listen to podcasts? Do you have pets? Do you ever clean your house? Do you ever volunteer somewhere?
Is it hard for you to fill six hours on a Saturday? It's really not that much time.
Right, but most responsible, competent adults don’t expect to have a lifetime of weekends.