Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn’t tell him because he’d get offended I didn’t want him around and/or he’d expect me to be doing something “productive” (like chores that otherwise have to get done evenings and weekends). I just wanted to spend the day in bed, in my sweats, eating chips and watching awful daytime TV while scrolling DCUM and other mindless internetting! I didn’t pretend to go to work. He has a longer commute so leaves earlier than I do. I worked out this AM and took the kids to school as usual, then returned home.
You have to still see that as a lie of omission. Since you didnt say anything and knew he left before you, you knew he wouldnt "notice" so you didnt have to tell him outright.
I dont think Id appreciate my spouse behaving like this. "if she doesnt specifically ask, I dont have to tell" feels wrong in a marriage (in mine at least).
You sound really controlling.
People who don't appreciate their spouse lying to them arent crazy, controlling or whatever else you replied as. I'd consider a spouse continually, habitually lying a huge problem.
I do feel for OPs situation though, her husband "not letting" her have a day to herself is terrible, so I get why she did it. I just don't think lying to your spouse contributes to a healthy foundation in marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s weird that you can’t take a day off without your husband. You really need to figure out why he’s so clingy.
If I have a day off he expects that either (a) he will join me and we’ll spend the day doing what HE wants to do, whether that means spending the day in bed together or cleaning out the garage), or (b) I will use the time to catch up on laundry or clean the bathroom or some other chore that otherwise happens evenings or weekends as we both work FT.
To be clear, we do sometimes coordinate days off and have day dates or do a house project. It’s not like that never happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn’t tell him because he’d get offended I didn’t want him around and/or he’d expect me to be doing something “productive” (like chores that otherwise have to get done evenings and weekends). I just wanted to spend the day in bed, in my sweats, eating chips and watching awful daytime TV while scrolling DCUM and other mindless internetting! I didn’t pretend to go to work. He has a longer commute so leaves earlier than I do. I worked out this AM and took the kids to school as usual, then returned home.
You have to still see that as a lie of omission. Since you didnt say anything and knew he left before you, you knew he wouldnt "notice" so you didnt have to tell him outright.
I dont think Id appreciate my spouse behaving like this. "if she doesnt specifically ask, I dont have to tell" feels wrong in a marriage (in mine at least).
You sound really controlling.
People who don't appreciate their spouse lying to them arent crazy, controlling or whatever else you replied as. I'd consider a spouse continually, habitually lying a huge problem.
I do feel for OPs situation though, her husband "not letting" her have a day to herself is terrible, so I get why she did it. I just don't think lying to your spouse contributes to a healthy foundation in marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have never done this to each other and never will. Why would you do that to your relationship?
Do... what? Like I said I will tell him in the future (because enough people think I should) but what am I doing to him?
Misleading him.
Lying to him.
Undermining his ability to trust you.
Blaming him for your decision to mislead him.
Now, playing the innocent "who me?" victim.
Your excuses don't make sense at all.
You sound crazy.
DP. I take time off all the time without telling my DH. I mean he doesn’t tell me either. Unless we have something planned, we rarely spend our days off together. We got $hit to do (separately). I took off Thanksgiving week Monday-Wednesday and DH didn’t figure it out until Wednesday afternoon.
Anonymous wrote:Reminds me of my ASD spouse who disappears in the middle of a weekend day to take a nap. Saunters downstairs a couple hours later and asks if everyone else made headway on the stuff he was supposed to do. We all laugh hard but it’s not cute.
If fact his breakfast plate, chair and coffee ground mess are probably still all out this very late afternoon. He’s hopefully some daughter or wife or sitter walks by it and cleans it up for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn’t tell him because he’d get offended I didn’t want him around and/or he’d expect me to be doing something “productive” (like chores that otherwise have to get done evenings and weekends). I just wanted to spend the day in bed, in my sweats, eating chips and watching awful daytime TV while scrolling DCUM and other mindless internetting! I didn’t pretend to go to work. He has a longer commute so leaves earlier than I do. I worked out this AM and took the kids to school as usual, then returned home.
You have to still see that as a lie of omission. Since you didnt say anything and knew he left before you, you knew he wouldnt "notice" so you didnt have to tell him outright.
I dont think Id appreciate my spouse behaving like this. "if she doesnt specifically ask, I dont have to tell" feels wrong in a marriage (in mine at least).
You sound really controlling.
People who don't appreciate their spouse lying to them arent crazy, controlling or whatever else you replied as. I'd consider a spouse continually, habitually lying a huge problem.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't you tell him you want a day to yourself? You're a grown up, use your words, and also schedule days where you both take off and have a day together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn’t tell him because he’d get offended I didn’t want him around and/or he’d expect me to be doing something “productive” (like chores that otherwise have to get done evenings and weekends). I just wanted to spend the day in bed, in my sweats, eating chips and watching awful daytime TV while scrolling DCUM and other mindless internetting! I didn’t pretend to go to work. He has a longer commute so leaves earlier than I do. I worked out this AM and took the kids to school as usual, then returned home.
You have to still see that as a lie of omission. Since you didnt say anything and knew he left before you, you knew he wouldnt "notice" so you didnt have to tell him outright.
I dont think Id appreciate my spouse behaving like this. "if she doesnt specifically ask, I dont have to tell" feels wrong in a marriage (in mine at least).
You sound really controlling.
Anonymous wrote:That's exactly why I don't tell DH when I take a day off sometimes. He always wants to hijack it and impose his hobby on us and bill it as OUR time, but I just want my own down time.
So I've done the not telling thing, and I've done the telling but setting firm boundaries: no I don't want to spend it on your hobby on my day off; I just want to see a movie that you don't care about.
Either way, I feel zero guilt.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I both work FT outside the home. I took the day off without mentioning it to him and he “caught” me when he emailed something to my work email address and got my out of office response. Now his feelings are hurt because he says if I’d told him he could have also taken the day off and spent the day together.
I wasn’t up to anything nefarious, just wanted a quiet day with the house to myself and I love him, but his idea of how to spend the day wouldn’t match mine. TBH I thought everyone did this sometimes - am I wrong?