Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
You work from home. Every meal you eat should be fresh. What's stopping you from cooking a nice meal for yourself at home? Are you really so completely incompetent in the kitchen that you can only eat leftovers?
That covers 'fresh' but completely ignores 'someone else cooked'
So go buy food from a restaurant! Why is this so hard?
I don't get the helplessness here. Is OP not allowed to talk to strangers except when her husband is present?!
NP. I agree that OP can do something about the situation, but her husband has a built-in social structure at the office and she doesn’t. Of course she can go out and make new friends but it’s much harder if you’re working from home. To have a group to go out to lunch with every day or even most days if the week can take years to build.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
You work from home. Every meal you eat should be fresh. What's stopping you from cooking a nice meal for yourself at home? Are you really so completely incompetent in the kitchen that you can only eat leftovers?
That covers 'fresh' but completely ignores 'someone else cooked'
So go buy food from a restaurant! Why is this so hard?
I don't get the helplessness here. Is OP not allowed to talk to strangers except when her husband is present?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
You work from home. Every meal you eat should be fresh. What's stopping you from cooking a nice meal for yourself at home? Are you really so completely incompetent in the kitchen that you can only eat leftovers?
That covers 'fresh' but completely ignores 'someone else cooked'
Anonymous wrote:
That covers 'fresh' but completely ignores 'someone else cooked'
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you mad about the money?
Are you mad he has friends and you don’t because you trail?
Are you mad he won’t include you?
Are you mad he doesn’t want to spend time with you after work?
If you can narrow down the actual issue, it might be easier to find a solution.
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
You work from home. Every meal you eat should be fresh. What's stopping you from cooking a nice meal for yourself at home? Are you really so completely incompetent in the kitchen that you can only eat leftovers?
Anonymous wrote:
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you mad about the money?
Are you mad he has friends and you don’t because you trail?
Are you mad he won’t include you?
Are you mad he doesn’t want to spend time with you after work?
If you can narrow down the actual issue, it might be easier to find a solution.
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
Neither of these things is for your DH to fix, particularly #2. #1 cannot be his problem during the day.
What do you do with your left overs?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure what the problem is. It’s clear he does work lunches with colleagues and is happy with that. You could do the same, meet a friend, or enjoy leftovers. Go out to eat together on weekends.
This. My DH used to complain about this back when I worked in person, but eating lunch out has always been part of my workday routine since I started making enough money to justify it. If it was a budgeting/money thing I would have been happy to stop, but I could afford it without it impacting our joint savings/budget in any way, and I liked it. I wasn't always going to restaurants, often it was just a salad from Chopt or a burrito bowl or something, but going out for food and then eating somewhere other than my office was part of how I maintained good mental health at work.
He had to get over it. Now we both work from home a couple days a week and mostly eat at home (not leftovers but simple meals at home) and he's started treating himself to lunch out on his in-office days once or twice a week. He could also not if he preferred. But I'm not going to deny myself something I look forward to and enjoy, and can afford, just because he wants to deny himself. It makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you mad about the money?
Are you mad he has friends and you don’t because you trail?
Are you mad he won’t include you?
Are you mad he doesn’t want to spend time with you after work?
If you can narrow down the actual issue, it might be easier to find a solution.
1. I'm incredibly lonely.
2. Once in a while, I would like to eat meals that someone else cooked and/or are fresh.
You should definitely raise these issues. Don’t complain about his eating with colleagues, which is not the issue. The issue is that you have moved for him and he doesn’t make time for you.
+1
And don’t complain! Just describe how you’re feeling and tell him what you’re like from him.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure what the problem is. It’s clear he does work lunches with colleagues and is happy with that. You could do the same, meet a friend, or enjoy leftovers. Go out to eat together on weekends.