Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, why you cannot do it without husband? It took me 4 years to completely gut and re-do all 4 bathrooms in our house. I just finished my master bathroom and I totally love it. Husband refused to get involved. I am looking at the kitchen now. I gave a an inexpensive face lift 4 years ago, I will start pricing a full remodel next year and planning to gut it out in 2-3 years. Just do it if this is important for you.
In our marriage, we don’t spend five or six figures without the other person’s consent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He sees it as a waste of money and he’s kind of right. You want to keep up with the Joneses or some shit like that.
I bet you watch a lot of HGTV
Haven’t had cable in 10 years.
I don’t get why everyone always thinks that wanting a nice, new home is because they need to keep up with the Joneses.
When I was younger I was bullied by my peers mercilessly. Home was the only safe place for me. My mom always had it decorated beautifully and it was my own little piece of peace.
My home is now the most beautiful place I’ve ever stepped foot in, because I want it to be an escape from the world. It has nothing to do with impressing my neighbors.
I agree. I’ve fought with my DH for more than a decade about this. He views a house as a mere storage locker for one’s stuff. I want a beautiful sanctuary. But he hasn’t wanted to spend the money because he thinks I’m trying to impress my friends. He refuses to accept that I just want this for myself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He sees it as a waste of money and he’s kind of right. You want to keep up with the Joneses or some shit like that.
I bet you watch a lot of HGTV
Haven’t had cable in 10 years.
I don’t get why everyone always thinks that wanting a nice, new home is because they need to keep up with the Joneses.
When I was younger I was bullied by my peers mercilessly. Home was the only safe place for me. My mom always had it decorated beautifully and it was my own little piece of peace.
My home is now the most beautiful place I’ve ever stepped foot in, because I want it to be an escape from the world. It has nothing to do with impressing my neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.
We have the money, 20x over. It’s not as though the money only belongs to him.
Then spend it. There is no reason for this post if you believe the above.
I don’t believe it, it’s true.
BUT it wouldn’t solve my issue that it’s really hurtful to me that he doesn’t value at all that this is important to me. It would just be great if he would say “I don’t understand wanting this, but it’s clearly very important to you so I want you to have it. Let’s keep the budget to X.” Or something like that. It would mean everything to me. Doing it to spite him/in spite of him is not what I want.
Anonymous wrote:OK, so long story short, your instinct to post in the relationships forum instead of home improvement was correct.
It's not about the kitchen.
Your relationship has resentment.
You feel unseen/disrespected.
You have a major gap in your financial values.
Your love language is possibly gifts and his is not.
Go to therapy alone first by the way to unpack your stuff around all of this. Then go together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.
We have the money, 20x over. It’s not as though the money only belongs to him.
Then spend it. There is no reason for this post if you believe the above.
I don’t believe it, it’s true.
BUT it wouldn’t solve my issue that it’s really hurtful to me that he doesn’t value at all that this is important to me. It would just be great if he would say “I don’t understand wanting this, but it’s clearly very important to you so I want you to have it. Let’s keep the budget to X.” Or something like that. It would mean everything to me. Doing it to spite him/in spite of him is not what I want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.
We have the money, 20x over. It’s not as though the money only belongs to him.
Then spend it. There is no reason for this post if you believe the above.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. When really pressed he admits we can “afford it” but states that it’s not something he values. When I point out that I value it and my feelings should matter too, he doesn’t really have anything to say to that. And that’s what hurts I think. It’s like how people say the no vote always wins. And he is almost always the no vote. It’s maddening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.
We have the money, 20x over. It’s not as though the money only belongs to him.
Then spend it. There is no reason for this post if you believe the above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.
We have the money, 20x over. It’s not as though the money only belongs to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point you are going to sell the house and you’d need to upgrade the kitchen and bathrooms to get full value, and not just repainting the cabinets. Many buyers will not want to take on the project so you are limiting the audience. Doing it now will save you money in the long run and you will get to enjoy it. Come up with a redo and timing that is the least disruptive to your living there.
OP here. I know all of this and have said it all repeatedly. Falls on deaf ears. I feel confident that rationale and common sense are on my side. It doesn’t matter - it’s like talking to a brick wall on this subject. He’s perfectly pleasant on other subjects. Funny, a good father. We take vacations, he doesn’t nit pick day to day household spending. But any mention of this and he’s just like “mmm hmmm, that’s nice, but NO.”
What does he value? Say NO to whatever it is he wants to buy or do.
Sadly, he values growing numbers on a balance sheet. He wins, I lose. I do work, but he makes way more. I am by far the primary parent though and handle the mental load, the food planning/shopping/prepping and most of the cleaning.
You’ve capitulated way too easily.
Based on what you shared, it IS about the money. He values investing more than a kitchen.
Which is why you need to get a new job, a second job, etc to fund the renovation.
Who will cook, clean and do all the laundry while I’m at my second job? Your idea sounds nice, but I’m pretty stuck unless I want family life to collapse which I don’t.
You are choosing to be a victim. You're not stuck. You could earn more money to pay for it yourself, but you're choosing not to. Own your choices.