Anonymous wrote:Why has not one suggested a chore chart? When one person is feeling resentful because they are doing it all, it is time to draw up a list of everything that needs to get done each week, chorewise, and split equitably. Note that I do not say evenly. That's what we do. We drew up a list of chores by difficulty/time required and split them up, with each person getting some easy chores and some more time-consuming chores. Then we switch on a weekly basis. (We don't switch until each person has finished their list.) Sometimes we don't accomplish everything within the week and it goes 10 days. But it's pretty fair. Our DC is now old enough to get 1/3 of the list. Makes for less griping. Just do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a SAHM, OP? Not knocking it at all (I was one myself for a few years), but I noticed that many of my SAHM friends have husbands who think that because their wives stay at home, household chores/duties are entirely out of their domain. Can you find out how your husband feels...and then try to find a way to show him how much you do/how little a break you get?
I no doubt will create a storm here, but, if one spouse stays at home, that spouse should take care (whether doing it himself or herself or arranging others to do so) of most of the chores/duties. Sorry, once the kids are in school, one has 20-30 hours a week to do stuff. That is the deal. This allows the spouse who works outside the home to be more agggresive with his or her career, while the other spouse handles the home front. Nothing wrong with this. We have had multiple nannies and cleaners over the years, and they took no more than 4-5 hours to complete a thorough basic cleaning of the house.
The OP WORKS FULL TIME you stupid, illiterate bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would get a job in the evenings. Let HIM take care of the child. Use YOUR money to pay for the things you want.
This is why I was always afraid to be a SAHM.... As much as it appeals to me, I think it creates a very unequal power dynamic in the marriage.
I must have missed something. How is staying at home relevant to this discussion? OP never said she was a SAHM.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this is new behavior. My guess is that OP has known all along that this is the same person she married and decided to have a child with. Somehow she thought she'd inspire him or he'd eventually get bored with the video games or some magic would transform him into a real man, not some lazy teenager. What kills me is the shock, anger and frustration.
OP-YOU CHOSE HIM!
this. men are not projects. op is a loser mom.
But women think they are. "he will change after we get married" - famous last words.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a SAHM, OP? Not knocking it at all (I was one myself for a few years), but I noticed that many of my SAHM friends have husbands who think that because their wives stay at home, household chores/duties are entirely out of their domain. Can you find out how your husband feels...and then try to find a way to show him how much you do/how little a break you get?
I no doubt will create a storm here, but, if one spouse stays at home, that spouse should take care (whether doing it himself or herself or arranging others to do so) of most of the chores/duties. Sorry, once the kids are in school, one has 20-30 hours a week to do stuff. That is the deal. This allows the spouse who works outside the home to be more agggresive with his or her career, while the other spouse handles the home front. Nothing wrong with this. We have had multiple nannies and cleaners over the years, and they took no more than 4-5 hours to complete a thorough basic cleaning of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this is new behavior. My guess is that OP has known all along that this is the same person she married and decided to have a child with. Somehow she thought she'd inspire him or he'd eventually get bored with the video games or some magic would transform him into a real man, not some lazy teenager. What kills me is the shock, anger and frustration.
OP-YOU CHOSE HIM!
this. men are not projects. op is a loser mom.
You're a bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this is new behavior. My guess is that OP has known all along that this is the same person she married and decided to have a child with. Somehow she thought she'd inspire him or he'd eventually get bored with the video games or some magic would transform him into a real man, not some lazy teenager. What kills me is the shock, anger and frustration.
OP-YOU CHOSE HIM!
this. men are not projects. op is a loser mom.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the details sound so familiar. Even the not cooking for DH. Did you post a while back?