Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You haven't said anything that lets us offer helpful feedback.
What responsibility are you shouldering? How big a paycheck? What access do you have to the money he makes? ARE you expecting too much? Can't say without knowing what you expect.
He is an active father but sucks at anything house related. I do all the shopping, cooking, managing outsourcing crews, 95% of the childcare, scheduling/taking kids to appointments, handling childcare.
I work part time making 60k. He works full time and makes 400-500k a year.
I have full access to our money.
I just want him to step up more with the household labor. He has said he is busy working to support our family to give me the ability to stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Do like what most women do especially if married to wealthy men. File for divorce. You will not only have a nice alimony, but you can meet a new guy preferably younger and have the best time of your life..
Anonymous wrote:Do like what most women do especially if married to wealthy men. File for divorce. You will not only have a nice alimony, but you can meet a new guy preferably younger and have the best time of your life..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like our family. Pretty similar.
What are you having trouble with, exactly? Just hire help.
And definitely keep the part time job.
I’m tired from the day to day and raising two very young kids - one who is still a young infant. It’s the menial repeat tasks like packing a lunch and snacks, laundry, constant surface level cleaning, making all appointments for kids, managing all the outsourcing, managing all the childcare, cooking 2-3 meals a day, doing all the grocery.
We have cleaners, a nanny for when I work, and outsource yard work. There isn’t really much else to outsource.
My husband is great with the kids but doesn’t help out with any cleaning or above tasks. He just sits down to relax while I do the cleaning up after we put the kids to bed.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds like our family. Pretty similar.
What are you having trouble with, exactly? Just hire help.
And definitely keep the part time job.
Anonymous wrote:This is a bad troll. Nobody on DCUM thinks a salaried person making 400K-500K per year is "marrying money."
Anonymous wrote:I married mostly for a good life and regret it. I shoulder almost all of the responsibility with little help from my husband. He isn't on board with taking on any more work because he brings in the big paycheck. I don't want to divorce but I feel overwhelmed. I sometimes wonder if I'm the problem and just expect too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You haven't said anything that lets us offer helpful feedback.
What responsibility are you shouldering? How big a paycheck? What access do you have to the money he makes? ARE you expecting too much? Can't say without knowing what you expect.
He is an active father but sucks at anything house related. I do all the shopping, cooking, managing outsourcing crews, 95% of the childcare, scheduling/taking kids to appointments, handling childcare.
I work part time making 60k. He works full time and makes 400-500k a year.
I have full access to our money.
I just want him to step up more with the household labor. He has said he is busy working to support our family to give me the ability to stay home.
He’s not entirely wrong. Since you’re working part-time you have more time to spend on running the household. He probably still works longer hours than you.
Anonymous wrote:Imagine having less money and being in the same spot. That is most people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I married mostly for a good life and regret it. I shoulder almost all of the responsibility with little help from my husband. He isn't on board with taking on any more work because he brings in the big paycheck. I don't want to divorce but I feel overwhelmed. I sometimes wonder if I'm the problem and just expect too much.
It's this. Expectations.
You thought money would = "a good life." It doesn't.
You are not at all alone in making this mistake.