Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it what does he do all day if no cooking cleaning or childcare ? Does he exercise? Play video games? Read books?
He spends a lot of time online and he likes to read
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Time for a come to Jesus conversation. I was a SAHM with a DH who traveled weekly. He had very few responsibilities and I did EVERYTHING from all housecleaning to cooking and getting kids to their activities. Once they were in school, I had time for most of the yard work as well as interior painting. What I does he do all day??
The thing is that he’s a low energy person
Also he told me that he won’t do the work our nanny does, same goes for yard work, we have a handy man who fixes everything
DH doesn’t take any initiative and stuff will go for weeks or months unless I pay for someone to fix it
Anonymous wrote:I feel you, OP. I was in a similar (although not as extreme) position for a while. None of these are complete fixes, but here is what I recommend:
1. Think hard about what home/kid stuff is truly necessary for your kids to be happy/healthy and for your house to be livable. forget about everything else and let it go for now. You guys are in crisis, so eyes on the prize.
2. Figure out which of the items from #1 you can take on without burning out and/or seething with resentment all the time.
3. Tell DH you are not doing to rest and that he needs to handle it. Then, and this is the truly hard part, do not pick up his slack. If he drops the ball or tries to pass it back to you, just hand it back to him. Repeat as necessary.
4. Appreciate what your DH does do. Even if it's not his share or as much as he should be doing, make an effort to consciously notice what he does and to compliment him on it. This will help decrease your resentment and will provide him with positive reinforcement which will make him want to do more stuff.
I don't think you need to get rid of the nanny. I held firm on no nanny when my DH was underemployed, and it really hurt my career and undermined my happiness. On the one hand, its not fair that you are paying for a nanny when your DH has no job. On the other hand, fair or not, it may be what you need right now to make this work.
Hang in there.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know what the right balance is for your family, but lots of families at DS’s school have a SAHM and an au pair. No one thinks this is odd. Especially with three kids and all their activities.
I think OP needs to be more direct. Tell DH he needs to sign the kids up for activities, fill out the school forms, make the medical appointments, etc. He doesn’t want to be friends with other parents. You can’t make someone want that if they don’t want it.
Anonymous wrote:Time for a come to Jesus conversation. I was a SAHM with a DH who traveled weekly. He had very few responsibilities and I did EVERYTHING from all housecleaning to cooking and getting kids to their activities. Once they were in school, I had time for most of the yard work as well as interior painting. What I does he do all day??
Anonymous wrote:He needs to go back to work. He sounds unhappy and not very good at this. You’re already paying for childcare so I don’t really understand what the big deal is even if he won’t be making a ton?
Also you can let go of the play date dream. Many women are not going to be comfortable having him over, etc. although PP is right in suggesting joining a group would be better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, what specifically do you want your dh to do that he is not doing? List specifics tasks.
I want him to engage with the family
To appreciate how much I’m doing and find ways to cut me slack
It’s hard for my kids that I’m not around more, my daughter tells me she’d prefer that I was home instead of him. I want him to engage so it’s less obvious to our kids
I want him to look out for me more
I’ve been mostly working at home for the last six months but if I need food I like I need to go to the store myself.
He doesn’t remember to get it for me
He’ll be sitting in his office watching a movie while someone is banging on the door, I’m on a zoom call so I can’t move but he’ll say he didn’t hear the door
Most of his behavior makes me think he really doesn’t care about me or the kids
Anonymous wrote:How many kids do you have?
The SAHDs we know are great. My kids are in elementary though. One dad is very active in scouts. Another dad hosts play dates often and always willing to lend a hand with driving kids. The one dad who isn’t active with kids is a guy who is struggling with his career. I would consider him unemployed. We know another dad of 1 who hasn’t been able to find work for years. I think it is very different if the guy wants to stay home or if he can’t find work.
I’m a SAHM of 3 and I have a PT housekeeper/nanny. I feel insanely busy. I’m sure If I said I was a SAHM mom with help, people would think I don’t do any childcare. That just isn’t the case. When the nanny cooks and cleans, I am taking care of the children. When she watches the kids, I usually have something to do with another child. It is nice not to have to lug all 3 children every time one of my kids has an activity, event, sport or play date.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it what does he do all day if no cooking cleaning or childcare ? Does he exercise? Play video games? Read books?
Anonymous wrote:Op, what specifically do you want your dh to do that he is not doing? List specifics tasks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you would keep a nanny. Like, at all. Seems like your DH does nothing at all?
Seems pretty obvious to me why--this is her actual coparent. Every biglaw mom with a SAHH kept her nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can see why you’re upset. I would be very resentful. Marriage is a partnership and he’s really not bringing much to the table.
But what can I do?
When I speak to him he gets angry and standoffish so nothing can change
Do you want to stay married?
You need to think really hard about this because the longer you stay the worse your position will be when you divorce. So, do you want to stay married to him? Can you accept that he will not contribute to the family in any meaningful way?
Only you can decide what you can tolerate. Nothing you say is going to change your husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s because the things that are important to you are not important to him. He doesn’t care about play dates, birthday parties, or the PTA. If your kids are happy and healthy, what’s the issue?
Women create so much extra work for themselves. I’m a mom that works outside the home, but if I stayed home I’d never do any of that stuff. Trying to make friends with people I do t care about sounds like hell. How important is this stuff that you are so worked up over it?
Are you kidding me??? The issue is that she’s super stressed and has to outsource the SAHP work that her husband refuses to do. She has to manage and pay for a full time nanny because her husband can’t handle taking care of their children. Yes, the children are okay — Because this lady is doing everything, and outsourcing what she can’t do. Her husband contributes nothing. Most people would not be okay with this setup.