Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Shops for kids clothes” includes numerous time-consuming tasks
Agree. I think spouse A does more. I recently delegated figuring out what clothes one of our kids grew out of to my spouse and the result was pitiful. I had to explain how to do it.
One of my kids is older than OP's, but scheduling and keeping track of all the things the kids need is a TON of work.
Anonymous wrote:Explain to me how the split of income is relevant here, Spouse OP. I mean B.
Anonymous wrote:“Shops for kids clothes” includes numerous time-consuming tasks
Anonymous wrote:Spouse B is making 75% of the household income but insists on doing the cleaning themselves and using it as a point against Spouse A that they are doing more work. Same with the scratch cooking. That is completely Spouse B’s preference.
It’s also hilarious that “putting away groceries” and “packs the lunch that the other spouse prepared” are making it onto this little tit-for-tat list
Anonymous wrote:Have you read Fair Play/used the cards? You might find it useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems kind of unfair to put down spouse A for making pre-prepared dinners when they WOH AND are responsible for getting kids to all their activities on weekdays.
Agree. This makes no sense at all. The WAH should do dinners, can just be crock pot or something simple. If I hustle to leave the office at 5, pick up kids from school and then get home. THEN I have to make dinner and then drive the kids to practice? This makes no sense. What is the WAH spouse doing at this time?
I guarantee that this is exactly what spouse A wants, for spouse B to pick up either meal prep or taking kids to activities since these are the hardest things for someone working full time in person to do, and spouse B resents it because, while they might not say it out loud, they believe their higher income should exempt them from these particular glamour-free parenting tasks. Even though logistically it makes way more sense for them to do them.
Just wait until spouse A finds out spouse B is using the time that spouse A is spending on driving the kids around and picking up dinner to work out, relax, or pursue a hobby. Because spouse B feels they are entitled to this leisure time, due to their income, whereas spouse A has to "pay the family back" for making less by doing more of the grunt work.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds reasonably fair, don’t destroy this part of your lives nit picking chores. Remember you two are on the same team.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds pretty even to me. My one beef would be that Spouse A should do everyone's laundry. If they are really leaving Spouse B's laundry for them to do, that's a reasonable beef. Laundry person should Laundry.
The other X factor I would say is how much between-cleans cleaning is done. For us, we have a monthly cleaner and in between we do very little, basically just nightly kitchen duties (spot sweep, wipe counters, load and run dishwasher, etc). If you also have a monthly cleaning person and you're essentially cleaning the whole house 1-3 other times a month, that is a ton of work. But my answer would be... don't do that. You can live with a toilet that's cleaned monthly, really. We do. If you both agree the house needs significant additional cleaning, then I would say Spouse B has a bit too much. If they're just doing the occasional spot-clean at the half way mark (<1 hr total) then, yeah, I think this is pretty even.
And you didn't mention nightly kitchen duties - I'm assuming that you're somehow splitting dishes/kitchen cleanup/dishwasher unloading. If Spouse B is doing this, then yeah, this is unfair and Spouse B is doing too much.
Otherwise, I see two people who work full time, each taking about half the kid shlepping and about half the food/meal work. One is taking on more of the logistical labor (spouse A) while one is doing more at home labor (spouse B). One does all the laundry, one handles the home maintenance/repairs. I could see an argument for handing Spouse B the vacation planning (since they're in charge of the calendar anyway). But that's pretty small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems kind of unfair to put down spouse A for making pre-prepared dinners when they WOH AND are responsible for getting kids to all their activities on weekdays.
Agree. This makes no sense at all. The WAH should do dinners, can just be crock pot or something simple. If I hustle to leave the office at 5, pick up kids from school and then get home. THEN I have to make dinner and then drive the kids to practice? This makes no sense. What is the WAH spouse doing at this time?
I guarantee that this is exactly what spouse A wants, for spouse B to pick up either meal prep or taking kids to activities since these are the hardest things for someone working full time in person to do, and spouse B resents it because, while they might not say it out loud, they believe their higher income should exempt them from these particular glamour-free parenting tasks. Even though logistically it makes way more sense for them to do them.
Just wait until spouse A finds out spouse B is using the time that spouse A is spending on driving the kids around and picking up dinner to work out, relax, or pursue a hobby. Because spouse B feels they are entitled to this leisure time, due to their income, whereas spouse A has to "pay the family back" for making less by doing more of the grunt work.