Anonymous wrote:What does he do after work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team DH here. An infant that little doesn’t require much. I doubt it takes you all day to do all of those things. Cleaning maintenance only tasks an hour a day tops.
OP you sound lazy. An normal infant isn’t that much work. Plus you have a weekly cleaning lady. You have nothing to complain about, sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I also want to mention I’m still pumping and breastfeeding because my husband doesn’t want our baby on formula. There is a lot of resentment there. It used to be easier when he did everything, but it’s a lot more tough nwot why I have to manage everything on my own.
That sucks. Feed your baby however it works best for you.
Do you really believe that he will step up when you go back to work part time?
Anonymous wrote:Team DH here. An infant that little doesn’t require much. I doubt it takes you all day to do all of those things. Cleaning maintenance only tasks an hour a day tops.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I also want to mention I’m still pumping and breastfeeding because my husband doesn’t want our baby on formula. There is a lot of resentment there. It used to be easier when he did everything, but it’s a lot more tough nwot why I have to manage everything on my own.
Anonymous wrote:I’m team DH. My husband is on paternity leave so he handles the baby while I work. He doesn’t seem to have an issue with this breakdown. Once he’s back to work we will split the time more evenly but he insists that he has time to handle velvety thing being home with the baby all day who naps multiple times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has not been pulling his weight lately and thinks I’m asking for too much. We welcomed our first child ( 10 weeks old) a couple of months ago. He took paternity leave and was wonderful. He spent time bonding with the baby, did housework, and waited on me with food and water. He’s been back at work for a month now and things have taken a 180. He has not done much besides spending a couple of hours a day with the baby. I’m doing most of the childcare and housework. I have told him multiple times he needs to do more things, but he has said I should handle it since he works all day. I understand he works all day but I’m exhausted too. Having to care for a baby, who often needs to be held for naps, is not easy. He said there is ample time for me to get housework done while baby naps, but I disagree. I’m also getting up with baby once at night. I’m going back to work PT in January and told him this won’t work for me. He said he will help out more once I’m back at work, but feels I should be doing most of the childcare and housework because I’m home. I feel me asking for more help is fair. I don’t know if being unreasonable with my expectations.
When the baby is small is the easiest time. Unsure how you're "exhausted" unless you're making a mess and not cleaning up after yourself. I your husband is working and supporting the family solo, you should give him more respect. It's a lot of stress (ESPECIALLY NOW) to support the family. Do you stress over taxes, bills, food, medical costs, etc? If your husband doesn't make the $$$ what happens to you and your baby? Your family?
Too often the working husband is taken for granted. Yes, being at home all day with an infant is BORING. But, it's not STRESSFUL. There is a huge difference. My wife and I went through the same thing. I operate several businesses. It's high stress and long hours. She worries about how to decorate the house. I worry about taxes, investments, employees, COVID-19, debt, etc. We're on two different levels. Perhaps you need to see how your husband views what's going on.
This is not to say he shouldn't help at all when he's home. But, after work he has a right to rest up. Again, taking care of an infant is the easy stage. Just wait. All your kid does now is eat, sleep, and poop. Just wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has not been pulling his weight lately and thinks I’m asking for too much. We welcomed our first child ( 10 weeks old) a couple of months ago. He took paternity leave and was wonderful. He spent time bonding with the baby, did housework, and waited on me with food and water. He’s been back at work for a month now and things have taken a 180. He has not done much besides spending a couple of hours a day with the baby. I’m doing most of the childcare and housework. I have told him multiple times he needs to do more things, but he has said I should handle it since he works all day. I understand he works all day but I’m exhausted too. Having to care for a baby, who often needs to be held for naps, is not easy. He said there is ample time for me to get housework done while baby naps, but I disagree. I’m also getting up with baby once at night. I’m going back to work PT in January and told him this won’t work for me. He said he will help out more once I’m back at work, but feels I should be doing most of the childcare and housework because I’m home. I feel me asking for more help is fair. I don’t know if being unreasonable with my expectations.
When the baby is small is the easiest time. Unsure how you're "exhausted" unless you're making a mess and not cleaning up after yourself. I your husband is working and supporting the family solo, you should give him more respect. It's a lot of stress (ESPECIALLY NOW) to support the family. Do you stress over taxes, bills, food, medical costs, etc? If your husband doesn't make the $$$ what happens to you and your baby? Your family?
Too often the working husband is taken for granted. Yes, being at home all day with an infant is BORING. But, it's not STRESSFUL. There is a huge difference. My wife and I went through the same thing. I operate several businesses. It's high stress and long hours. She worries about how to decorate the house. I worry about taxes, investments, employees, COVID-19, debt, etc. We're on two different levels. Perhaps you need to see how your husband views what's going on.
This is not to say he shouldn't help at all when he's home. But, after work he has a right to rest up. Again, taking care of an infant is the easy stage. Just wait. All your kid does now is eat, sleep, and poop. Just wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is there to clean up in terms of baby's toys? A 10 week old baby will be fascinated for 15 minutes if you hand them a plastic spoon to play with. There's no collection of tiny legos all over the place like we have with our elementary schoolers.
This. I think OP is creating part of the problem because she doesn't really understand appropriate child development. Picking up the toys that a 10 week old plays with takes all of 30 seconds. After feeding, you plop her in a carrier and wash the bottle. There really isn't a whole lot of cleaning up after a 10 week old.
You also need to fix the nap issue.
Anonymous wrote:What is there to clean up in terms of baby's toys? A 10 week old baby will be fascinated for 15 minutes if you hand them a plastic spoon to play with. There's no collection of tiny legos all over the place like we have with our elementary schoolers.