Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry but why are you putting all the onus on him? You had the lower paying job. Do you know what it’s like carrying the household on your shoulders?
You seem selfish and self-centered. OP, why don’t YOU get a restaurant job?!
OP. I hear you. We agreed together when I got my masters degree in education that it was ok for me to have the lower paying job based on the trajectory of his career. I also am trying to find a higher paying job, in addition to summer work. He did not need to leave his prior job, he chose to and it didnt work out and left us way worse off than we ever were.
Presumably it was a joint decision. You can't blame him when you and your children are part of the reason he took the job (you keep spending more and more money, you said it yourself). Also you have no idea if his old job would have remained stable.
His old job did remain stable. Everyone is still there. But in this thread weve moved on from ppl wanting to shame me for being in education, etc and weve moved on to kind ppl sharing their stories or productive suggestions. So no need for you to brung it back to where we moved on from. Just move along to the next thread. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry but why are you putting all the onus on him? You had the lower paying job. Do you know what it’s like carrying the household on your shoulders?
You seem selfish and self-centered. OP, why don’t YOU get a restaurant job?!
OP. I hear you. We agreed together when I got my masters degree in education that it was ok for me to have the lower paying job based on the trajectory of his career. I also am trying to find a higher paying job, in addition to summer work. He did not need to leave his prior job, he chose to and it didnt work out and left us way worse off than we ever were.
Presumably it was a joint decision. You can't blame him when you and your children are part of the reason he took the job (you keep spending more and more money, you said it yourself). Also you have no idea if his old job would have remained stable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry but why are you putting all the onus on him? You had the lower paying job. Do you know what it’s like carrying the household on your shoulders?
You seem selfish and self-centered. OP, why don’t YOU get a restaurant job?!
OP. I hear you. We agreed together when I got my masters degree in education that it was ok for me to have the lower paying job based on the trajectory of his career. I also am trying to find a higher paying job, in addition to summer work. He did not need to leave his prior job, he chose to and it didnt work out and left us way worse off than we ever were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Substitute teaching isn't a bad idea to get some money coming in.
Also, I've seen people consult on a fractional basis. Like, let me do this work you need done. They only have to commit for 30 days. If they don't like the work, you both move on. Basically, it's setting up a consulting situation that I've seen frequently turn into full time jobs.
But that goes back to needing to have contacts. It really works when someone needs something done but doesn't have the funds to hire a full-time person. And while doing that, continue to search for full-time.
Just a thought.
Yes he initially told me this is what he would do in the meantime but he has yet to land one of these gigs. He thought it would be easier than its been to do that, which has been another let down in this process because the idea of this type of thing was helping him(and me) stay hopeful.
I wonder if he is charging too much? You hear about these crazy high numbers people say they are making to consult. Sure, if you're a top firm. But if you're a guy who is putting out his own shingle, then you really need to be cost effective, basically making a fraction of what a full time employee would cost them. A person who I know who did it barely made any money with the first job, and had to really work to convince the guy to do it. He also had to be very proactive on the avenue he would take. He got the contract and it lasted 6 months. Long enough to start filling the pipeline for new opportunities. A lot of work and very stressful, but it paid off.
also, he built a website. Very basic but it looked professional.
the hardest part was getting in front of people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 are you me?
Sounds like my situation- husband been unemployed- I’m barely holding it together- so much resentment.
+2
Me too. It totally socks and I'm actually pondering divorce. I have enough anxiety of my own and cannot deal with his expectations for me to do all the housework, food prep, child care and still be the only one working.
I feel like I have daily breakdowns. I cry, feel sorry for our situation, then feel bad I’m not being supportive.
I want to talk to someone- hoping to make a connection for him. I’ve been prayerful and hopeful- all that I can do.
I work part time, then do some private tutoring in the evening.
Some days I can’t catch my breath.
I can only image how he’s feeling… he feels lost, depressed, like a loser… it’s so hard watching your spouse fail.
OP here- youve summed it up exactly. Many sleepless nights over here and then the daytime is so hard because Im mentally exhausted and tired from not sleeping. Although going to work and being busy there feels like a vacation away from the turmoil I feel when Im at home.
Yes- that’s exactly how it is. And then I have to come home… curious to know what he did or didn’t do… sleeping in, not motivated…
This sounds like a different situation. If my DH were unemployed and playing video games all day/not looking for another job/not even trying to bring in income in the interim by driving uber, bartending, etc. I’d leave him.
He definitely doesn’t play video games. He’s severely depressed. It’s hard to watch. He was our family’s provider. I was a stay at home mom. Now I have to go to work. He stays home- tinkering with our house falling apart…
I’m torn with having compassion and resentment and so many emotions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 are you me?
Sounds like my situation- husband been unemployed- I’m barely holding it together- so much resentment.
+2
Me too. It totally socks and I'm actually pondering divorce. I have enough anxiety of my own and cannot deal with his expectations for me to do all the housework, food prep, child care and still be the only one working.
I feel like I have daily breakdowns. I cry, feel sorry for our situation, then feel bad I’m not being supportive.
I want to talk to someone- hoping to make a connection for him. I’ve been prayerful and hopeful- all that I can do.
I work part time, then do some private tutoring in the evening.
Some days I can’t catch my breath.
I can only image how he’s feeling… he feels lost, depressed, like a loser… it’s so hard watching your spouse fail.
OP here- youve summed it up exactly. Many sleepless nights over here and then the daytime is so hard because Im mentally exhausted and tired from not sleeping. Although going to work and being busy there feels like a vacation away from the turmoil I feel when Im at home.
Yes- that’s exactly how it is. And then I have to come home… curious to know what he did or didn’t do… sleeping in, not motivated…
This sounds like a different situation. If my DH were unemployed and playing video games all day/not looking for another job/not even trying to bring in income in the interim by driving uber, bartending, etc. I’d leave him.
He definitely doesn’t play video games. He’s severely depressed. It’s hard to watch. He was our family’s provider. I was a stay at home mom. Now I have to go to work. He stays home- tinkering with our house falling apart…
I’m torn with having compassion and resentment and so many emotions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Substitute teaching isn't a bad idea to get some money coming in.
Also, I've seen people consult on a fractional basis. Like, let me do this work you need done. They only have to commit for 30 days. If they don't like the work, you both move on. Basically, it's setting up a consulting situation that I've seen frequently turn into full time jobs.
But that goes back to needing to have contacts. It really works when someone needs something done but doesn't have the funds to hire a full-time person. And while doing that, continue to search for full-time.
Just a thought.
Yes he initially told me this is what he would do in the meantime but he has yet to land one of these gigs. He thought it would be easier than its been to do that, which has been another let down in this process because the idea of this type of thing was helping him(and me) stay hopeful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 are you me?
Sounds like my situation- husband been unemployed- I’m barely holding it together- so much resentment.
+2
Me too. It totally socks and I'm actually pondering divorce. I have enough anxiety of my own and cannot deal with his expectations for me to do all the housework, food prep, child care and still be the only one working.
I feel like I have daily breakdowns. I cry, feel sorry for our situation, then feel bad I’m not being supportive.
I want to talk to someone- hoping to make a connection for him. I’ve been prayerful and hopeful- all that I can do.
I work part time, then do some private tutoring in the evening.
Some days I can’t catch my breath.
I can only image how he’s feeling… he feels lost, depressed, like a loser… it’s so hard watching your spouse fail.
OP here- youve summed it up exactly. Many sleepless nights over here and then the daytime is so hard because Im mentally exhausted and tired from not sleeping. Although going to work and being busy there feels like a vacation away from the turmoil I feel when Im at home.
Yes- that’s exactly how it is. And then I have to come home… curious to know what he did or didn’t do… sleeping in, not motivated…
This sounds like a different situation. If my DH were unemployed and playing video games all day/not looking for another job/not even trying to bring in income in the interim by driving uber, bartending, etc. I’d leave him.
Anonymous wrote:Substitute teaching isn't a bad idea to get some money coming in.
Also, I've seen people consult on a fractional basis. Like, let me do this work you need done. They only have to commit for 30 days. If they don't like the work, you both move on. Basically, it's setting up a consulting situation that I've seen frequently turn into full time jobs.
But that goes back to needing to have contacts. It really works when someone needs something done but doesn't have the funds to hire a full-time person. And while doing that, continue to search for full-time.
Just a thought.
Anonymous wrote:Can he start a business? I did that in my 30s and have never looked back.