Anonymous wrote:The driving thing is deeply, deeply weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. To answer a few questions:
I’m the DW (shocker).
I work 25-30 hours/week in a flexible, patient-facing healthcare job and make about 1/3 of DH’s salary. Even before the pandemic, it was a stressful career. I’ve stayed in my position because I’m the de facto parent and household manager.
I’m starting a new job with a normal schedule and higher salary (about 75% of DH’s) soon. All legwork for finding camps/daycare was on me, as were the financial responsibilities.
DH pays the mortgage. I pay for everything else - food, utilities, clothing, other bills, transportation, insurance, household items. We used to split housing costs 50/50 before I flexed down as a new parent.
He put the down payment on our house. I paid all the renovation costs, bought appliances, and furnished it.
It took years to get him to agree to buy a house despite multiple pleas for the sake of everyone’s sanity. He was deeply resentful that I didn’t contribute more to the DP and that most of my assets are tied up in retirement.
He barely does anything around the house. Doesn’t take out trash and will leave things out for me to deal with. Won’t vacuum because it hurts his ears. Doesn’t do any laundry except his own.
DH has never liked driving. Before kids, this wasn’t a big deal. However, he let his license expire while I was pregnant with our younger kid and has been doing backflips to avoid renewing it. I drove myself to the hospital when I was in labor and have been the only licensed driver on big family road trips.
He’s vegan by choice (used to be a more relaxed vegetarian). I’m flexitarian and like a variety of foods. He imposes his food issues on our kids. Finding something for him to eat is always a challenge, plus he’s extremely unpleasant when he’s hungry.
We have normal BMIs for our height. No one has let themselves go.
Who just lets their license expire?? That is super weird, whether he likes driving or not. As in I suspect mental illness. How does he get to work? He just never leaves the house unless you drive him??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did the higher earner get a DUI, or otherwise lose his license?
I know a family where the "higher earner" who is a partner in a Big Law firm lost his license due to repeated high speed tickets (kid in car). Wife had to drive him everywhere for something like 2 years. Was really burdensome.
Anonymous wrote:The way you have framed it, the answer is obvious.
But it is also obvious the other party would frame those problems in a different way.
Maybe get counseling to present both sides of the story and see if compromise is possible.
Anonymous wrote:He does not vacuum because it hurts his ears?! Lol.
Outsource cleaning when you have more HHI.
Find a counselor and work on more of a joint mindset esp re: finances, etc. To be on the safe side I would tee up my ducks in case of divorce. He will really try to screw you over.
He sounds like he has some mental health issues tbh.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. To answer a few questions:
I’m the DW (shocker).
I work 25-30 hours/week in a flexible, patient-facing healthcare job and make about 1/3 of DH’s salary. Even before the pandemic, it was a stressful career. I’ve stayed in my position because I’m the de facto parent and household manager.
I’m starting a new job with a normal schedule and higher salary (about 75% of DH’s) soon. All legwork for finding camps/daycare was on me, as were the financial responsibilities.
DH pays the mortgage. I pay for everything else - food, utilities, clothing, other bills, transportation, insurance, household items. We used to split housing costs 50/50 before I flexed down as a new parent.
He put the down payment on our house. I paid all the renovation costs, bought appliances, and furnished it.
It took years to get him to agree to buy a house despite multiple pleas for the sake of everyone’s sanity. He was deeply resentful that I didn’t contribute more to the DP and that most of my assets are tied up in retirement.
He barely does anything around the house. Doesn’t take out trash and will leave things out for me to deal with. Won’t vacuum because it hurts his ears. Doesn’t do any laundry except his own.
DH has never liked driving. Before kids, this wasn’t a big deal. However, he let his license expire while I was pregnant with our younger kid and has been doing backflips to avoid renewing it. I drove myself to the hospital when I was in labor and have been the only licensed driver on big family road trips.
He’s vegan by choice (used to be a more relaxed vegetarian). I’m flexitarian and like a variety of foods. He imposes his food issues on our kids. Finding something for him to eat is always a challenge, plus he’s extremely unpleasant when he’s hungry.
We have normal BMIs for our height. No one has let themselves go.
Who just lets their license expire?? That is super weird, whether he likes driving or not. As in I suspect mental illness. How does he get to work? He just never leaves the house unless you drive him??
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen this dynamic in friends. It’s the biggest danger women face in dialing down their earning power in order to raise kids. Basically, the husband starts to view his wife as “owing” him or as the help. The problem with that is then the wife never gets down time. And the husband doesn’t understand that. It’s unsustainable and actually seems to get worse when the kids are grown. I’ve seen this. I don’t have kids, but I’ve seen it in people close to me. The wife thinks it will get better when the kids leave, but it gets worse because then the husband thinks the wife has it easy without having to take care of kids, and he expects more. The power dynamic is gross.
My advice is to address it now. If you work part time, get a full time job and divide child and house care evenly. If husband says no, tell him it’s that or divorce.
Stop being a martyr. It doesn’t matter if the internet agrees you are right. What matters is getting your power back and becoming a partner, not a servant.