Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:11     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Act 1
A happy family, one husband, one wife and three lovely children. Child A has a holiday performance on Thursday morning and needs to wear a “green Christmas sweater, blue jeans and white sneakers” per teacher instructions. Child 2 has Christmas caroling at the old people’s home on Friday and needs a red dress and plate of cookies. Child 3 is receiving an award for a speech on Friday also, and will be needing a birthday present for friend’s party that same afternoon. Wife takes care of all of these things noiselessly, on top of regular work. She also lets husband know where to be on performance and award day.
Act 2
Husband: shows up.
Act 3
Society: why do women complain about mental labor? It’s a fiction that only exists in their hysterical imaginations and they invent tasks to do because they are hysterical.

Curtain.


Some data for you OP

https://ifstudies.org/blog/the-myth-of-the-lazy-father


That’s Bs methodology. The work addict dad who avoids family responsibilities gets to count his 40-70 hours a week hiding out at the office, home office and iPhone as “household help?”

Yeah, we all know what that means. And what would happen if both parents behaved like that.


Right?
I mean, the fact that men spend more time at work and less time doing childcare is the exact issue.
It’s kind of upsetting that the author of this article doesn’t seem to get it.


If he's making more money for the family then it's time well spent. Making less money to have more time to make cookies for the old folks is a bad tradeoff and doesn't help the family.


Why is that a bad trade off?
As long as we have enough money for the things we need and a lot of the things we want, then why is it so awful for a man to bake cookies with his daughter instead of making more money?


If you want an underemployed man who has lots of free time to make dr appointments and cookies, then have at it. I'm sure those types of men are a dime a dozen but I wouldn't know because I wouldn't be interested. But very few well paying jobs offer lots of flexibility and free time for the nonsense schools push on parents.


And the reality is those PP's are imposing their judgment of what is "good for the family". Suppose the husbands said, I wish my wife would cut out all of the unnecessary crap and pick up some extra hours at work for the family. The kids don't need all of these extras; they'll be fine. They would be apoplectic. Yet somehow their judgments of how their husbands should "better" use their time "for the family" supersedes his. And, of course, you know that they would complain nonstop if husband was underemployed and funds to underwrite their dream lifestyle were lacking. These are just the sort of people who would complain no matter what.


My husband makes plenty of money and has decided his time is better spent at work rather than trying to DIY a leaky toilet or repairing dry wall. He's more than happy to pay someone who can do it right and not waste his time on it. That's the tradeoff we make. I handle the bulk of the kid stuff although he reads the school emails and will ask if I'm aware of this or that. He also does a lot of chauffeuring kids around. But he will never shop for the red dress or drop everything to get cookies. It works for us.


Can he tell when a toilet needs fixing?
Does he tell someone or call the repairman?
Does he arrange the repair time and let them in?
Does he pay the repair and look over the work?

Or does he see a leaky toilet or clogged drain in his very own home, and say nothing and do nothing?
Thats what I’m dealing with- and he “works” 5am-6pm at home and then drinks and watches TV from 6-9pm before crashing on the sofa. He has a 10pm alarm set on his phone to wake up and go upstairs to bed.


Is he underemployed or not? The tradeoff has to be a lot of money to make up the difference. Yours doesn't sound like he's bringing home the bacon at a high powered well paying job. Big difference.


You are missing the point.

If a high income but uninvolved dad can’t tell something or someone is broken or in need, and thus does nothing, then problem(s) will snowball.

Nothing to do with underemployed or not.
Has to do with paying attention, giving a damn and effort when at home.


This

It’s about giving a damn. And showing that you do.


And who is the arbiter of how to appropriately show you "give a damn"? Lemme guess: you?


Easy. List examples here of your husband demonstrating “giving a damn” about his wife and kids.

Here I’ll start:
- Showed up at the concert!?!
- Got on the plane to gramdma’s!?!
- ate Thanksgiving dinner with everyone!?!
- picked out a movie to watch every night of the week!?!


Why did you marry and have kids with this person? You're having your own little meltdown in here talking about something only tangentially related to the OP.


So you are blaming the wife for not having clairvoyance to know what her husband would be like when they have children? That's like blaming a rape victim on what they were wearing
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:10     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:He’s a ManChild.


What's the female equivalent of a manchild?


Only focused on herself.
Ignores children and spouse every morning, evening and weekend.
Shows up at public events like parties, games, concerts with her prop children and spouse.
Maintains own sleep schedule.
Watches a lot of tv after 6pm to avoid family members.
Doesn’t read nor respond to mail, email, texts unless from her work or besties.
Doesn’t plan, make decisions, point things out.
Doesn’t process mail or messages or bills.
May or may not have income from work or trusts.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:09     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:Act 1
A happy family, one husband, one wife and three lovely children. Child A has a holiday performance on Thursday morning and needs to wear a “green Christmas sweater, blue jeans and white sneakers” per teacher instructions. Child 2 has Christmas caroling at the old people’s home on Friday and needs a red dress and plate of cookies. Child 3 is receiving an award for a speech on Friday also, and will be needing a birthday present for friend’s party that same afternoon. Wife takes care of all of these things noiselessly, on top of regular work. She also lets husband know where to be on performance and award day.
Act 2
Husband: shows up.
Act 3
Society: why do women complain about mental labor? It’s a fiction that only exists in their hysterical imaginations and they invent tasks to do because they are hysterical.

Curtain.


So doesn't do anything but 'show up'?
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:08     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote: Btw, a nanny, cook and cleaner simply cannot sub in for a real parent who parents, or a house manager, health IDer, tutor, therapist for the kids. They don’t have the owner operator mentality or the skills and have their own problems to deal with.


Paid help can take a significant load off of a parent and family.


Not really, but maybe you’re talking about kids age 0-8 task rabbit stuff. They still need some training, direction and management from someone.


Nah. Just give them the keys to your house and emails and let them loose! Just make sure they are at least proficient in English.


I would recommend properly vetting. This is assuming one or both parents can provide financing and are capable of vetting.



Mr. Important surely has good vetting, hiring, training and managing processes for his household’s staff.


He vetted Mrs. Important


For an independent, Type A, Get Things Done woman.
Then hurry up and have a kid so you’re tethered forever.


Oh, yes, the secret to happiness is to be tethered forever to a Type A woman. Lol.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:07     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:I hope all the super smart posters here who are happy to save time by sending their child to an event without complying with the dress code are regularly deciding to wear crumpled tee shirts to the office rather than those high maintenance button down shirts. After all who has time to dry clean laundry or even fold it? Obviously all of you with your superior intellect have decided that is a task that doesn’t need to be done.

Or…is it only fine when your kid is the one who is embarrassed by sticking out like a sore thumb?


Is little Cindy going to get fired from going to the old folks home if she wears a blue dress instead? Sounds like a pretty serious thing, and it would be totally smart to get divorced over it.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:04     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Btw, a nanny, cook and cleaner simply cannot sub in for a real parent who parents, or a house manager, health IDer, tutor, therapist for the kids. They don’t have the owner operator mentality or the skills and have their own problems to deal with.


Paid help can take a significant load off of a parent and family.


Not really, but maybe you’re talking about kids age 0-8 task rabbit stuff. They still need some training, direction and management from someone.


Nah. Just give them the keys to your house and emails and let them loose! Just make sure they are at least proficient in English.


I would recommend properly vetting. This is assuming one or both parents can provide financing and are capable of vetting.



Mr. Important surely has good vetting, hiring, training and managing processes for his household’s staff.


He vetted Mrs. Important


For an independent, Type A, Get Things Done woman.
Then hurry up and have a kid so you’re tethered forever.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:01     Subject: Two spouses: a play

I hope all the super smart posters here who are happy to save time by sending their child to an event without complying with the dress code are regularly deciding to wear crumpled tee shirts to the office rather than those high maintenance button down shirts. After all who has time to dry clean laundry or even fold it? Obviously all of you with your superior intellect have decided that is a task that doesn’t need to be done.

Or…is it only fine when your kid is the one who is embarrassed by sticking out like a sore thumb?
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 18:01     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a terrible play.


Very trite. I had such high hopes from the title, too.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:57     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I want to know what kind of school is dictating all of these things for these activities -- outfits, cookies, etc. That's nonsense.


My kids schools do this.

One kid needs all black for a band concert. One kid needs a white dress and shoes for a choir concert. Another needs a suit for a model UN competition. The oldest also needed a new swimsuit, goggles and cap for a swim unit in his PE class that started Monday. He told me on Sunday.


Are these public or private schools. Just crazy stuff.


Public schools.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:37     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I want to know what kind of school is dictating all of these things for these activities -- outfits, cookies, etc. That's nonsense.


My kids schools do this.

One kid needs all black for a band concert. One kid needs a white dress and shoes for a choir concert. Another needs a suit for a model UN competition. The oldest also needed a new swimsuit, goggles and cap for a swim unit in his PE class that started Monday. He told me on Sunday.


Many parents here confirm. And they hate this. It drives them crazy.

Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:37     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I want to know what kind of school is dictating all of these things for these activities -- outfits, cookies, etc. That's nonsense.


My kids schools do this.

One kid needs all black for a band concert. One kid needs a white dress and shoes for a choir concert. Another needs a suit for a model UN competition. The oldest also needed a new swimsuit, goggles and cap for a swim unit in his PE class that started Monday. He told me on Sunday.


Are these public or private schools. Just crazy stuff.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:32     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I would be shocked if he knew about the sweater and decided it didn’t need to be done. That’s just not how things work in most families.


They have 3 kids. This isn't the first time something like this has come up, surely. She doesn't like his way of doing things and just does it her way.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:31     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I want to know what kind of school is dictating all of these things for these activities -- outfits, cookies, etc. That's nonsense.


My kids schools do this.

One kid needs all black for a band concert. One kid needs a white dress and shoes for a choir concert. Another needs a suit for a model UN competition. The oldest also needed a new swimsuit, goggles and cap for a swim unit in his PE class that started Monday. He told me on Sunday.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:26     Subject: Re:Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I think people are being a bit obtuse focusing on the individual tasks and arguing over whether or not they are important.


No, it's common sense.

When people assign importance to tasks, they can focus on more important tasks and de-prioritize things that are unnecessary. If your spouse and/or family is not contributing, that's even more reason to de-prioritize the unnecessary.


How can someone who doesn’t read any of their non-work emails or texts prioritize them?


The magic fairy.


Who needs to be told the outfits and cookies aren't that important. Does your husband really need to tell you that?


Husband says nothing since he reads no emails.

Ignorance is bliss.


This isn't his first rodeo. In the past he said forget the green shirt, red dress and cookies and she told him that was the wrong answer. So he lets her do it her way and when she gets angry he refrains himself from telling her "I told you so". She's mad that she painted herself into this corner by insisting that this is all very important and simply must be done. He has given up.


I would be shocked if he knew about the sweater and decided it didn’t need to be done. That’s just not how things work in most families.
Anonymous
Post 12/03/2025 17:21     Subject: Two spouses: a play

Anonymous wrote:He’s a ManChild.


What's the female equivalent of a manchild?