Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure what I just read. Your husband is incapable of managing a ups drop off and getting kids off the buss because he's cleaning the kitchen?
You married a moron and had kids with him. Good luck with that.
Sounds like he was flourishing in his government job then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Leaving your spouse a list of work to do is always inappropriate.
That’s the most asinine comment in this thread. My wife and I have always gravitated toward different tasks that we specialize in. I do all the home maintenance / renovation, automotive and yard / vegetable gardening work, vacuuming, and bathroom cleaning, among other things. She, on the other hand, doesn’t want me anywhere near the kitchen or panty. She’s a world class cook and doesn’t want me in her favorite home workspace any more than I’d want her rummaging through my carefully organized tool chests in the garage.
During furloughs throughout the years, I loved the fact that she left me lists that were aligned with her own “to do” list, so I could take some burden off her shoulders if I had any free time — and the stuff would be the most urgent to get done.
That way I could get up early and plan out my day. E.g., I could drop the kids’ stack of due library books off at the local branch, or get some particular ingredients she needed at Wegmans, on the way back from whatever errands I was running.
What kind of married couple would NOT want to align their priorities and tasks like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Leaving your spouse a list of work to do is always inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Leaving your spouse a list of work to do is always inappropriate.
That’s the most asinine comment in this thread. My wife and I have always gravitated toward different tasks that we specialize in. I do all the home maintenance / renovation, automotive and yard / vegetable gardening work, vacuuming, and bathroom cleaning, among other things. She, on the other hand, doesn’t want me anywhere near the kitchen or panty. She’s a world class cook and doesn’t want me in her favorite home workspace any more than I’d want her rummaging through my carefully organized tool chests in the garage.
During furloughs throughout the years, I loved the fact that she left me lists that were aligned with her own “to do” list, so I could take some burden off her shoulders if I had any free time — and the stuff would be the most urgent to get done.
That way I could get up early and plan out my day. E.g., I could drop the kids’ stack of due library books off at the local branch, or get some particular ingredients she needed at Wegmans, on the way back from whatever errands I was running.
What kind of married couple would NOT want to align their priorities and tasks like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Leaving your spouse a list of work to do is always inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "He gets overwhelmed with a list"? A list of simple household chores is too much for him? Cleaning up the kitchen or vacuuming a few rooms is not difficult work. Has he always been this lazy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your husband is lousy. You married him.
He wasn’t always like this. He was motivated and driven. The time thing was there and the efficiency but he was the calm and slow to my mania.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband is NOT a go get ‘em guy and he’s always been super inefficient with time. But now he’s home all day (7:30-3:30, alone, no kids) but hasn’t done anything beyond the day to day tasks. I worry about him.
I am not leaving him a list, because he gets overwhelmed easily and doesn’t manage time well. For example, I asked him one day to drop off somethings for returns at ups but then he called me stressed because he missed getting the kids off the bus. I gently apologized and said I thought maybe he’d go early but he said he was cleaning the kitchen.
I am worried about him sitting home on his phone all day. His home office (now obsolete) is a mess. I don’t want to nag him but I worry…he’s home all day and doesn’t do anything.
He’s an adult. Stop treating him like an errand boy.
Fed here- he should totally be an errand boy. He basically should be functioning like a sahd. Deep cleaning, switching out summer clothes for winter for the kids, yard work, organizing closets.
Speak for yourself.