Anonymous wrote:Is there any love in this equation? Do you love him? Does he love kids? Is it just a set up where both of you are trapped due to obligation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a full time single parent is incredibly hard, OP. I wouldn’t throw that around lightly. You have no idea all the benefits you have just by having a second person around for emergencies or in case you need to run to the store for diapers after dinner.
This is stupid. DoorDash exists for delivering diapers and is way cheaper and easier than a spouse who doesn’t pull their weight.
And honestly, the only reason people run out of diapers mid-week is because the H failed to follow through on handling supplies.
Anonymous wrote:Being a full time single parent is incredibly hard, OP. I wouldn’t throw that around lightly. You have no idea all the benefits you have just by having a second person around for emergencies or in case you need to run to the store for diapers after dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a full time single parent is incredibly hard, OP. I wouldn’t throw that around lightly. You have no idea all the benefits you have just by having a second person around for emergencies or in case you need to run to the store for diapers after dinner.
so... basically, her DH is like an as needed baby sitter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can give the ultimatum, but you should be prepared to accept his decision and follow through. Are you honestly and truly prepared to leave him if he decides he wants to stay on the fast track, or are you bluffing and hoping that he makes the 'right' choice?
Yes, I would leave. It was absolutely miserable for me being the solo parent while he had zero energy at home to do anything. I may as well just be a full single parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good lord I hope he takes it and let you go your way. Do you even work?
Yes, I work full time and make about 50% more than him.
So very frustrating I'm the main breadwinner and I’m expected to do most of the domestic work so he can have a fun job.
Anonymous wrote:Being a full time single parent is incredibly hard, OP. I wouldn’t throw that around lightly. You have no idea all the benefits you have just by having a second person around for emergencies or in case you need to run to the store for diapers after dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Shorter hours and less commute and same money and he wants to give that up? Either he's more gay than he wants to admit, he doesn't like you,or you're that unbearable to be around. (Also was he working his pretty 28 year old colleague at his old job?)
I WFH at my highest salary I've ever made but shifted to that in 2022 after my wife who has a very visible disability miscarried and I had to either burn leave or go back to my SCIF on that Monday. I like being able to have afternoon delight on my lunch break. Then my wife can sit in her tub all afternoon and relax if she wants. If we have another baby I can help with childcare and my wife can use my closet which is now a laundry closet. That makes laundry easier and lower risk for her. Steps away instead of multiple flights of steps.
Anonymous wrote:I think you're in the right here. He can't expect you to shoulder the finances and all the domestic work so he can pursue a vanity project.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good lord I hope he takes it and let you go your way. Do you even work?
Yes, I work full time and make about 50% more than him.
So very frustrating I'm the main breadwinner and I’m expected to do most of the domestic work so he can have a fun job.
What does this even mean? Expected to do the domestic work by whom? Him? Has he told you that or are you just another typical DCUM mommy martyr?
DP here. I hate this tone on here. It means if she wants the kids to have a hot dinner or clean laundry she has to do it. If she wants them off screens she has to enforce it. Because if she doesn’t, he just, won’t.
Anonymous wrote:I hate these “it’s all on me. I and only I do all the work!!” threads.