Anonymous wrote:I'm a DH. I do about 90% of the cooking and all of the shopping. Yes, I "know what she likes", but there is a shopping list on the fridge. If it isn't one of the planned meals, she has to put a note on the shopping list. She can put "snacks" and I'll look at what's on sale that she sometimes eats and get that. If she wants something specific, she has to put it down. I take my phone and snap a photo of the shopping list before I go. I refer to that. If she didn't put it on the list, she can walk down to the store and buy it herself or wait until the next shopping trip. With 2 kids, I don't have time to do extra shopping trips because she didn't put it on the list.
And I don't make her lunches. She is welcome to put "lunchmeat" "fruit" even "lunch supplies" on the list and I'll get supplies for her to make lunches. But otherwise, she's on her own for lunches.
He does plenty of kind things for me because he loves me.
constantly bugging me to go to the store because "there is nothing to eat."
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you don't buy a lot of junk food. Good for you (seriously--I don't mean that in a bitchy way), but is your DH into with healthy eating?
Mine isn't, so "there's nothing to eat" translates to "there's no ice cream/chips/cookies/frozen pizzas". He then goes to the store on his own to buy those things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There really is no need to call me names.
NP here, you ARE a doormat, you make a lunch for him when he is home anyway. You cut up vegetable... Wow...
That sound crazy.
I don't think that is being a doormat. If she enjoys doing that for her husband, so be it.
If she does it because she feels it is her duty, that is another story.
My step father makes my mother's coffee for her everything morning. That includes the cream/sugar. Is he a doormat? No. He just loves doing it for her and she loves the coffee he makes.
Anonymous wrote:Tape a sign on the fridge door that says: "Nothing to eat? Really?" then lists everything that is in the fridge/pantry he could eat from fruit to snacks to sandwiches he could put together.
I did this when I had this issue with my teenaged sons. It might work with your husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There really is no need to call me names.
NP here, you ARE a doormat, you make a lunch for him when he is home anyway. You cut up vegetable... Wow...
That sound crazy.
I don't think that is being a doormat. If she enjoys doing that for her husband, so be it.
If she does it because she feels it is her duty, that is another story.
My step father makes my mother's coffee for her everything morning. That includes the cream/sugar. Is he a doormat? No. He just loves doing it for her and she loves the coffee he makes.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a DH. I do about 90% of the cooking and all of the shopping. Yes, I "know what she likes", but there is a shopping list on the fridge. If it isn't one of the planned meals, she has to put a note on the shopping list. She can put "snacks" and I'll look at what's on sale that she sometimes eats and get that. If she wants something specific, she has to put it down. I take my phone and snap a photo of the shopping list before I go. I refer to that. If she didn't put it on the list, she can walk down to the store and buy it herself or wait until the next shopping trip. With 2 kids, I don't have time to do extra shopping trips because she didn't put it on the list.
And I don't make her lunches. She is welcome to put "lunchmeat" "fruit" even "lunch supplies" on the list and I'll get supplies for her to make lunches. But otherwise, she's on her own for lunches.