Anonymous wrote:Divorce him. You can live without your husband, and your child does not need a dad. Daycare is going to be a great experience for your child and you will see how very resilient your child will become.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Also, you are currently a sahm, so the house work is on you. That changes when you start working.
Says who? DP here. I am a SAHM and the housework is not on me. I stayed home because I had a kid and DH and I could not give the time and care to our baby when both of us were working. I was not SAH when we didn't have kids. I am not a "SAH-do-all-household-shit" person, I am a SAH mom. I am 100% available for my kids, I am not 100% available for the household chores and for my DH. My DH knows that if ever he will expect me to do the household chores because I am not drawing a paycheck, I'll happily go back to work and pay someone else to do the chores. If my DH SAH, I would not expect him to do the housework either. That can be easily outsourced.
If you cannot stand doing household chores, and you cannot afford to hire help, and the expectation is that you will be a maid too, then maybe you should really evaluate if you want to be a SAHM. Incidentally, most WOHMs are also doing a large share of the household chores because they cannot outsource these chores because of finances or time to manage it. Isn't that the whole bitching on this forum about? Its not as if working outside of the home is getting all the women emancipated from household chores. SAHM or WOHM - if you cannot do the chores, kindly spend some money and outsource. And if for financial reasons you cannot outsource then maybe you should just endure it without subjecting others to your sorry saga.
Anonymous wrote:
Also, you are currently a sahm, so the house work is on you. That changes when you start working.
Says who? DP here. I am a SAHM and the housework is not on me. I stayed home because I had a kid and DH and I could not give the time and care to our baby when both of us were working. I was not SAH when we didn't have kids. I am not a "SAH-do-all-household-shit" person, I am a SAH mom. I am 100% available for my kids, I am not 100% available for the household chores and for my DH. My DH knows that if ever he will expect me to do the household chores because I am not drawing a paycheck, I'll happily go back to work and pay someone else to do the chores. If my DH SAH, I would not expect him to do the housework either. That can be easily outsourced.
Anonymous wrote:Why do women marry such losers?
OP, was this an arranged marriage and you had no idea what your DH was like?
Anonymous wrote:Lots of men refuse to engage in things like school tours - who knows why. I wouldn't necessarily take that as a signal, my husband talks passionately about wanting our kids to go to "the best" schools but has yet to actually go to a tour / open house / do any research etc.
Tactically use the additional HHI from your working to hire a cleaning service and any other supports you need to make life manageable. Your husband wants to work instead of focusing on domestic stuff, you want to work instead of focusing on domestic chores - so jointly you pay to outsource those chores. Its a very worthwhile investment to prevent fights
Anonymous wrote:OP do you need the money? Will your husband make a lot more than you? If the answers are no/yes, I don't understand why you won't just stay home. Why is everything about "happiness" and nothing about sacrifice? I'm sure your husband would stay home if it were financially possible for him to do so.
Women have choices. Men have obligations.
Anonymous wrote:Okay so I'm going to play devil's advocate here and ask the question that no one seems to have asked yet. And that is did you and your DH actually discuss a plan for childcare before you got pregnant and/or before the baby was born?
Is it possible you agreed to be a SAHM and he was enthusiastic about the value of that (some men still are, some are not) and now he feels disappointed and like you are pulling a bait and switch? It is not really his decision to make for YOUR life, but it does impact the manner in which your shared child is raised (and, as you pointed out, his ability to interact with said child over daily lunches), so maybe he is just really upset about it and you have to give him a hot minute to adjust to the rug being pulled out from under him.
I don't think his not being enthusiastic about this means that he SUCKS any more than you changing your mind about staying at home means that YOU suck. You just aren't seeing eye to eye on this. Of course, your viewpoint has to "win" here for your own sanity (and possibly for the welfare of your child, b/c depression is no joke and that is where you are headed if you don't take care of your own needs) but it doesn't mean he is intstantly going to be thrilled. I think you need to maybe own part of this as yours for making a plan and being unable/unwilling to stick to it. Allow for him to have negative feelings about it. And then acknowledge those feelings and ask how you can help him to overcome how he's feeling and accept the new reality in a more positive way. If you want the best for your child and family, you really do need to meet him halfway.
Others telling you your husband is a jerk is not productive or helpful for your marriage.
Women have choices. Men have obligations.
Anonymous wrote:OP do you need the money? Will your husband make a lot more than you? If the answers are no/yes, I don't understand why you won't just stay home. Why is everything about "happiness" and nothing about sacrifice? I'm sure your husband would stay home if it were financially possible for him to do so.
Women have choices. Men have obligations.