Anonymous wrote:Sounds like nobody wants to work hard in your house. Just keep things as is.
Anonymous wrote:Men shouldn't WFH. His T and social skills are deteriorating.
Anonymous wrote:I’d tell him to take on those tasks now (why isn’t he already?) and you’ll see what is out there in terms of job mobility for you. Is he actually going to step up and do the things he said?
Has he made new friends lately by chance? My DH had a similar change and it was because he made a new group of friends who were “wealthy men of leisure” types who spent a lot of time during the day exercising, lunching, and golfing. The difference was those guys were a decade older, in many cases had family $$$ or were working cushy jobs for “the family business” (again, family $$ basically). Many of them also talked about time with kids, blah blah but were not doing a lot of parenting from what I could tell. My DH got incredibly jealous……who wouldn’t, I suppose.
Ended up being a phase my DH got over….we don’t make nearly enough $ for him to live that lifestyle LO. I think I posted ano Jr it on DCUM at some point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many contradictions in this post.
-OP does soo much for the kids, can't get another job because she has to take care of the kids.
-When DH wants to? Of course he wants to, now that they're easy! They don't really need it, they're self sufficient, they can drive themselves this year.
-OP complains that DH never saw the kids, left before they woke up, home late, she had to do everything and resented it.
-When DH wants to? He's home too much, he's too lazy, he's awake too late (??), he's unattractive and unambitious.
-OP resents him never being around to care for the children and never seeing them. When he wants to? He's Mr. Mom and again she finds it unattractive.
Make up your damn mind. No wonder men talk about women not knowing what they want and being fickle.
OP doesn’t like her husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I am your husband. Not actually, but someone a lot like him. I worked very hard these years sacrificing my physical and mental health to provide you with an amazing life. Now that I’ve spent some time WFH, I realized just how amazing that life is and I want some of it for myself too before I kick the bucket.
You are welcome.
NP, but you sound very immature and self centered, not cut out to be a father.
Am I good enough to be a mother, though?
Definitely not.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, I am your husband. Not actually, but someone a lot like him. I worked very hard these years sacrificing my physical and mental health to provide you with an amazing life. Now that I’ve spent some time WFH, I realized just how amazing that life is and I want some of it for myself too before I kick the bucket.
You are welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming you have enough money and will be able to retire comfortably, there is nothing wrong with him having more flexibility. I gained a lot more flexibility and can work less starting around age 48, because I’m “the boss.” I don’t have to get into the weeds. My team does and comes to me to make the hard decisions. Hard decisions take a lot less time than digging into all the details to present the issues to me.
Honestly, my husband is a little freaked out that I’ve gone from being a workaholic to perfectly ok running to the grocery store between meetings at 2pm on Tuesday or even watching TV while I eat my lunch. I spend LOTS more time with our middle school daughter. I make about 80% of our income.
I also want to retire as soon as I can. Hopefully by 55, but definitely by 60. It will depend on the exit value of my company in a few years. He looks freaked out when I mention retirement. But he will adjust.
That said, you really need to dig into what you want here. Do you want him doing more family
Stuff? Or to just stop bugging you about making more? Or both? Figure that out. But acting like he needs to go back to being a workaholic is likely incredibly unrealistic. He is pivoting and likely realizing life is too short.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I am your husband. Not actually, but someone a lot like him. I worked very hard these years sacrificing my physical and mental health to provide you with an amazing life. Now that I’ve spent some time WFH, I realized just how amazing that life is and I want some of it for myself too before I kick the bucket.
You are welcome.
NP, but you sound very immature and self centered, not cut out to be a father.
Am I good enough to be a mother, though?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I am your husband. Not actually, but someone a lot like him. I worked very hard these years sacrificing my physical and mental health to provide you with an amazing life. Now that I’ve spent some time WFH, I realized just how amazing that life is and I want some of it for myself too before I kick the bucket.
You are welcome.
NP, but you sound very immature and self centered, not cut out to be a father.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, I am your husband. Not actually, but someone a lot like him. I worked very hard these years sacrificing my physical and mental health to provide you with an amazing life. Now that I’ve spent some time WFH, I realized just how amazing that life is and I want some of it for myself too before I kick the bucket.
You are welcome.