Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, is your DH more experienced in relationships? Older or younger?
Yes, 4 yrs older; second marriage for spouse (who said spouse is a DH?).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yuck
Sounds like your spouse just makes explicit what is often implicit on many relationships. Yawn.
This was my first thought as well. I wish my spouse and I were this upfront about things. Think about it…if there was a chore that you didn’t like, then you can trade for something your spouse doesn’t like and be free of it forever.
Someone said that this would not be sustainable after kids, but I heartily disagree. I think it would be amazing after kids. There is a lot of give and take with little kids that require 24/7 supervision. I hated the feeling that I had to choose between being the shrew wife that wouldn’t let her husband golf with his buddies or go to happy hour or feeling lonely and kind of taken advantage of. How great would it be if he was like, “If I go golfing on Saturday, then I will do bedtime every night this week.”?
As far as the sexual stuff, I would find that kind of hot. But I have been married for fifteen years, and I’m not sure that my husband still finds anything I do in bed exciting enough to warrant a weekend away. I’m not sure that I would have liked it six months into being married. I think that’s something that you both have to be into for it to work. Otherwise, it’s just creepy.
It’s not hot. It makes me think of that scene from Requiem for a Dream.
Wow. I guess it depends on whether you think your husband is gross, and his being turned on creeps you out, or if you think he is sexy, and his being turned on turns you on.
Anonymous wrote:All successful couples I know have given me advice not to be this way and keeping track of this type of stuff is a recipe for disaster. The fact that your spouse is on their 2nd married at 36 (?) might be an indicator they aren’t great at marriage. Did they do any therapy after their divorce or marriage counseling during? Sometimes divorce is the fault of one person, but the majority of time it’s both people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yuck
Sounds like your spouse just makes explicit what is often implicit on many relationships. Yawn.
This was my first thought as well. I wish my spouse and I were this upfront about things. Think about it…if there was a chore that you didn’t like, then you can trade for something your spouse doesn’t like and be free of it forever.
Someone said that this would not be sustainable after kids, but I heartily disagree. I think it would be amazing after kids. There is a lot of give and take with little kids that require 24/7 supervision. I hated the feeling that I had to choose between being the shrew wife that wouldn’t let her husband golf with his buddies or go to happy hour or feeling lonely and kind of taken advantage of. How great would it be if he was like, “If I go golfing on Saturday, then I will do bedtime every night this week.”?
As far as the sexual stuff, I would find that kind of hot. But I have been married for fifteen years, and I’m not sure that my husband still finds anything I do in bed exciting enough to warrant a weekend away. I’m not sure that I would have liked it six months into being married. I think that’s something that you both have to be into for it to work. Otherwise, it’s just creepy.
It’s not hot. It makes me think of that scene from Requiem for a Dream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All successful couples I know have given me advice not to be this way and keeping track of this type of stuff is a recipe for disaster. The fact that your spouse is on their 2nd married at 36 (?) might be an indicator they aren’t great at marriage. Did they do any therapy after their divorce or marriage counseling during? Sometimes divorce is the fault of one person, but the majority of time it’s both people.
Spouse did do therapy after first marriage ended, yes. Prior marriage ended because of infidelity on part of spouse’s ex.
Anonymous wrote:I’d maybe suggest working on the language of the transactions to make it less explicit. For example, DH and I often check in with each other to see which chores each are planning to do. We also sometimes make a list and divide up the work. Make it “I’m going to wash the dishes tonight. Can you take the car in next week?” Rather than “I’ll do this if you do that for me.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All successful couples I know have given me advice not to be this way and keeping track of this type of stuff is a recipe for disaster. The fact that your spouse is on their 2nd married at 36 (?) might be an indicator they aren’t great at marriage. Did they do any therapy after their divorce or marriage counseling during? Sometimes divorce is the fault of one person, but the majority of time it’s both people.
Spouse did do therapy after first marriage ended, yes. Prior marriage ended because of infidelity on part of spouse’s ex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, is your DH more experienced in relationships? Older or younger?
Yes, 4 yrs older; second marriage for spouse (who said spouse is a DH?).
Not another experiment where you try to see if we respond differently based on gender…
Wait, so the wife is the one demanding stuff in bed that the OP doesn’t want to do? In exchange for a weekend away at a country inn? Huh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, is your DH more experienced in relationships? Older or younger?
Yes, 4 yrs older; second marriage for spouse (who said spouse is a DH?).
Not another experiment where you try to see if we respond differently based on gender…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, is your DH more experienced in relationships? Older or younger?
Yes, 4 yrs older; second marriage for spouse (who said spouse is a DH?).