Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are newlyweds and just got married. He told me yesterday that he doesn’t like my cooking very much. I was a little taken back because he has always eaten what I’ve made. I’m a little hurt, but more so, unsure of what to do. Do I keep cooking for him or just cooking for myself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
People who don’t cook don’t get to complain about the food. Eat it or starve.
Agreed. He can't throw stones if he's unwilling to share the load.
Agree.
Funny how she/OP should improve her cooking skills but he gets to bypass cooking or learning to
As adults we all have to do stuff we don't like -- no option to simply skip things that are challenging or new.
Red flag
My husband and I were definitely not great at cooking when we first started living together out of college, but we learned together. If he'd demanded I learned to cook without him also putting in the effort, I wouldn't have married him.
I mean, my Dad would make his famous lasagna for parties, my granddad would take us fishing and then cook a fish dinner with us. Men who can't do basic tasks and refuse to learn are just pathetic.
I agree and commented as such above. However, just to play devil's advocate, what about women who refuse to learn how to do car maintenance, house/yard upkeep, etc?
dp.. yes, women need to know how to do that, too. But, certain tasks require brute strength, which women don't have women.
That said, DH has taught DD how to change a tire. I do yard work and have fixed things around the house, like our vacuum, had to get a rubber tube to replace the washing machine rubber tube.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
People who don’t cook don’t get to complain about the food. Eat it or starve.
Agreed. He can't throw stones if he's unwilling to share the load.
Agree.
Funny how she/OP should improve her cooking skills but he gets to bypass cooking or learning to
As adults we all have to do stuff we don't like -- no option to simply skip things that are challenging or new.
Red flag
My husband and I were definitely not great at cooking when we first started living together out of college, but we learned together. If he'd demanded I learned to cook without him also putting in the effort, I wouldn't have married him.
I mean, my Dad would make his famous lasagna for parties, my granddad would take us fishing and then cook a fish dinner with us. Men who can't do basic tasks and refuse to learn are just pathetic.
I agree and commented as such above. However, just to play devil's advocate, what about women who refuse to learn how to do car maintenance, house/yard upkeep, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take turns. You eat what the other makes and appreciate it, that's how it works.
He doesn’t cook and has no interest in learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
People who don’t cook don’t get to complain about the food. Eat it or starve.
Agreed. He can't throw stones if he's unwilling to share the load.
Agree.
Funny how she/OP should improve her cooking skills but he gets to bypass cooking or learning to
As adults we all have to do stuff we don't like -- no option to simply skip things that are challenging or new.
Red flag
My husband and I were definitely not great at cooking when we first started living together out of college, but we learned together. If he'd demanded I learned to cook without him also putting in the effort, I wouldn't have married him.
I mean, my Dad would make his famous lasagna for parties, my granddad would take us fishing and then cook a fish dinner with us. Men who can't do basic tasks and refuse to learn are just pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take turns. You eat what the other makes and appreciate it, that's how it works.
He doesn’t cook and has no interest in learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take turns. You eat what the other makes and appreciate it, that's how it works.
He doesn’t cook and has no interest in learning.
And yet he’s interested in eating (along with being a critic.) That would not fly with me. Wait til you have kids. Bet he won’t be interested in learning to care for them!
Anonymous wrote:First: You were taken "aback".
Second: This is a tale as old as time, on your part and his. He pretends to like your cooking because he loves you. Finally he can't stand it anymore, so he confesses. You are hurt. He is sorry he hurt you. You learn to cook more to his liking over time. It's a process. No one screwed up here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
This is a very bad sign in the relationship. Cooking is an expression of love, and if he doesn’t have any interest in trying at least to help you cutting vegetables, start preparing the exit.