Anonymous wrote:This thread is proof positive of why men die earlier.
They need to get away from all of the nasty, horrible women they're married to. Better to die than live with these nasty shrews.

Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not new, and it's not exclusive to DCUM. Who in your household keeps track of birthdays, doctors appointments, clothing sizes, early dismissals, permission slips, camp signups, holiday cards, and meal planning? Does that person also have a paid job?
I do all of this and have a paid job. It's not hard. Why do women seem to struggle with it?
-- Single Dad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.
+1000. I was a SAHM until my youngest went to kindergarten. It was horrible. I love my kids but I also like time alone. Now that I make almost as much as my DH the mental load is equalizing. He really started doing more when I had a high demand/visibility position and just couldn’t anymore.
I think if it is just assumed to be mom’s responsibility, it’s infuriating.
This is why I pretty much refuse to go back to work full-time. My kids are in school, and when my husband makes noises about me going back, I ask him what additional tasks he will do if I do. He replies that he will order our groceries online.
He has no idea on any given week if he will have to leave for work early or stay at work late (attorney) or go meet a client or have some other fire to put out. He’s helpful enough when he’s here but doesn’t give it a second though when he calls to say he will be late. The only way I don’t lose my mind at the inequity is the fact that I don’t also work full time. (I am a sub.) If I did work full time I think I would just be angry at him all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.
+1000. I was a SAHM until my youngest went to kindergarten. It was horrible. I love my kids but I also like time alone. Now that I make almost as much as my DH the mental load is equalizing. He really started doing more when I had a high demand/visibility position and just couldn’t anymore.
I think if it is just assumed to be mom’s responsibility, it’s infuriating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is still a gigantic disparity in the gender death gap.
Women can cry about mental loads all they want. Men clearly deal more internally with stress and don't cry about it. That's why they die earlier and die more often from almost every disease out there.
They also are more reluctant to go to the doctor, which makes a difference in their health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not new, and it's not exclusive to DCUM. Who in your household keeps track of birthdays, doctors appointments, clothing sizes, early dismissals, permission slips, camp signups, holiday cards, and meal planning? Does that person also have a paid job?
I do all of this and have a paid job. It's not hard. Why do women seem to struggle with it?
-- Single Dad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.
Anonymous wrote:There is still a gigantic disparity in the gender death gap.
Women can cry about mental loads all they want. Men clearly deal more internally with stress and don't cry about it. That's why they die earlier and die more often from almost every disease out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I understand that this is a real thing based on a societal expectation carried over from a time when most women didn’t work outside the home. What I don’t understand is why women like those on DCUM allow this to persist. You recognize it’s happening and yet you keep doing it? Why?
Because I have to.
My husband agreed he would be responsible for all medical appointments. My 9 yr old has been 3 times in her whole life and now needs one baby tooth capped and another pulled.
It’s either take things back that are supposed to be on his plate, or divorce. And I actually do love him so that’s not a good solution.
Your 9 DD has been to the dentist 3 times in their life? WTAF? DH here who found and handle all dental appts, but DW is aware of them (on a shared calendar) and sees the postcard from Dentist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.
A LOT of people do the bolded tasks but do not get to enjoy the lifestyle afforded by a 600K individual salary. So while her work is not unimportant, without her husband's income, her standard of living would likely drop significantly. Ergo, she *absolutely* should be grateful to her husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not new, and it's not exclusive to DCUM. Who in your household keeps track of birthdays, doctors appointments, clothing sizes, early dismissals, permission slips, camp signups, holiday cards, and meal planning? Does that person also have a paid job?
I do all of this and have a paid job. It's not hard. Why do women seem to struggle with it?
-- Single Dad.
If this isn’t hard for you, you are either superdad or crummy at your job and at parenting.
Do you always think in such binary terms?
I'm no "superdad" but I am a good, if imperfect one.
I'm a top performer at work in a senior executive role.
My kids are older teens now and I've taught them to take on more responsibility for themselves. They make their own doctors and dental appointments now, for example and even go alone unless I am required to be there because they are minors. They know the birthdays of their family members. They also know when bills are due (contribute to their phone and car insurance expenses) and each kid prepares one family meal per week (DD1 has Tuesdays and DD2 does Thursdays).
I guided DD1 on college applications, but served more as a consultant and adviser -- she did it all herself.
DD2 initiated her driving behind the wheel tests.
If they need permission slips or early dismissals, they talk to me and we get it done.
Again, some of this is tedious, but it's not really HARD, let alone mentally taxing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90 percent of women on my block are SAHMs. My neighbor for instance has one kid at home, an executive husband and she does clean her own house and manage house and makes dinner for three every night. Except weekends.
Her husband works in an office and eats breakfast and lunch there.
So an extra chicken cutlet at dinner time and sex on his birthday is what he gets for sharing his 600k a year salary with her.
She can deal with mental load
Exhibit A for why women are underappreciated. This woman cleans, manages a house, parents, cooks and she should be grateful for it!
Sounds like all this man has to do is go to work. I'd rather be the man in this situation. And yes, I also make a good salary.