Anonymous wrote:My wife looks after our 3 kids all day. That is WAY harder than my job.
I don’t know how she does it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife became a stay at home mom when our kid was born. that was five years ago. I make more than enough money so it was better for our kid that she stay home. I'm fine with her not working because even when she did work I made 4x her salary.
When our kid turned 2.5 she went to "pre-school" for three hours a day then five and now six hours. This fall she'll be in K and will be gone for 6-7 hours. I don't mind my wife staying at home. But, this is what bothers me.
1. When she doesn't keep the house clean. We only have one kid and she's pretty good. No reason not to keep the house clean.
2. She has "working out" at the bottom of her priority list. This is one of biggest annoying things she does. Right now she has six hours each day without our kid...shopping is priory #1 and "errands" which is basically returning stuff she has bought. It's not hard to take ONE HOUR in the mid morning to work out.
3. She doesn't want to learn how to cook well. I've been cooking for over 20 years (I started early in college) and I assumed when we finally had a kid she would WANT to learn how to cook - NOPE. She does cook, but it's the bare minimum. She prefers shopping at Trader Joes instead of cooking food from scratch. She has the time to learn, but it's not a priority.
Bottom line: For me (and I'm sure many man-hating women will disagree) if you're going to be a stay-at-home-mom do it well. I work 55-60 hours a week making a very good living. I expect my wife to be a very good house wife and mother. I think most men would agree, if stay at home spouses did their part everyone would be happy.
Newsflash: it’s not better for your kid for her to stay home. That’s your first wrong assumption. Check any studies. There are 100,000 out there.
Anonymous wrote:I would feel bad for OP. What is the meaning of her life? Seriously... I don’t know anyone like her. Maybe she is depressed? Low self esteem? Maybe never went to school? I can’t believe anyone would be happy and fulfilled just doing nothing. I work FT and have 2 kids. I agree that taking care or small kids is much harder than working 10 hours a day. I truly admire moms that manage to do that, clean their house, cook etc. I do none of those things during the week
Anonymous wrote:I would feel bad for OP. What is the meaning of her life? Seriously... I don’t know anyone like her. Maybe she is depressed? Low self esteem? Maybe never went to school? I can’t believe anyone would be happy and fulfilled just doing nothing. I work FT and have 2 kids. I agree that taking care or small kids is much harder than working 10 hours a day. I truly admire moms that manage to do that, clean their house, cook etc. I do none of those things during the week
Anonymous wrote:I was stuck with a stay at home wife for a decade before we even had kids. Never would have married her if I had known how lazy she was.
Anonymous wrote:My husband does not resent me being home with no kids. I've done and do my share. If he did have a problem with it, he's free to go and find someone more suitable.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high earning woman of a guy who did entrepreneurial things which never worked out, then became disabled, in his mind because he doesn’t qualify for disability based on his condition, but claims he can’t work. Our kids are grown, but like PP, I wouldn’t be resentful if I came home to a well run household. He doesn’t cook, doesn’t clean, ruins my laundry and is functionally incompetent. Oh and somehow he found it amusing to play footsie with a divorcée while I was working my ass off. Yes I’m resentful.
Anonymous wrote:My wife became a stay at home mom when our kid was born. that was five years ago. I make more than enough money so it was better for our kid that she stay home. I'm fine with her not working because even when she did work I made 4x her salary.
When our kid turned 2.5 she went to "pre-school" for three hours a day then five and now six hours. This fall she'll be in K and will be gone for 6-7 hours. I don't mind my wife staying at home. But, this is what bothers me.
1. When she doesn't keep the house clean. We only have one kid and she's pretty good. No reason not to keep the house clean.
2. She has "working out" at the bottom of her priority list. This is one of biggest annoying things she does. Right now she has six hours each day without our kid...shopping is priory #1 and "errands" which is basically returning stuff she has bought. It's not hard to take ONE HOUR in the mid morning to work out.
3. She doesn't want to learn how to cook well. I've been cooking for over 20 years (I started early in college) and I assumed when we finally had a kid she would WANT to learn how to cook - NOPE. She does cook, but it's the bare minimum. She prefers shopping at Trader Joes instead of cooking food from scratch. She has the time to learn, but it's not a priority.
Bottom line: For me (and I'm sure many man-hating women will disagree) if you're going to be a stay-at-home-mom do it well. I work 55-60 hours a week making a very good living. I expect my wife to be a very good house wife and mother. I think most men would agree, if stay at home spouses did their part everyone would be happy.
Anonymous wrote:My wife became a stay at home mom when our kid was born. that was five years ago. I make more than enough money so it was better for our kid that she stay home. I'm fine with her not working because even when she did work I made 4x her salary.
When our kid turned 2.5 she went to "pre-school" for three hours a day then five and now six hours. This fall she'll be in K and will be gone for 6-7 hours. I don't mind my wife staying at home. But, this is what bothers me.
1. When she doesn't keep the house clean. We only have one kid and she's pretty good. No reason not to keep the house clean.
2. She has "working out" at the bottom of her priority list. This is one of biggest annoying things she does. Right now she has six hours each day without our kid...shopping is priory #1 and "errands" which is basically returning stuff she has bought. It's not hard to take ONE HOUR in the mid morning to work out.
3. She doesn't want to learn how to cook well. I've been cooking for over 20 years (I started early in college) and I assumed when we finally had a kid she would WANT to learn how to cook - NOPE. She does cook, but it's the bare minimum. She prefers shopping at Trader Joes instead of cooking food from scratch. She has the time to learn, but it's not a priority.
Bottom line: For me (and I'm sure many man-hating women will disagree) if you're going to be a stay-at-home-mom do it well. I work 55-60 hours a week making a very good living. I expect my wife to be a very good house wife and mother. I think most men would agree, if stay at home spouses did their part everyone would be happy.