Anonymous wrote:OP here. His idea of taking care of our DC is plopping her in the living room with toys while he plays video games or reads reddit on his phone.
I come home to dishes in the sink. Clean clothes unfolded and un put away. Our bed sheets are never washed unless I do it. His cooking consists of heating up chicken nuggets, or frozen pizza. The only time we eat vegetables is if I cook them. And I do- I cook a meal almost every day.
I am pissed.
Anonymous wrote:How much money do you people recommending daycare make? Do you have any idea how much daycare is for a toddler? I don't know too many people who can afford daycare on ONE income.
Be realistic, people.
Anonymous wrote:I am a SAHM who left a great job and career to raise my kids. I am also highly educated (and so is my high earning DH), so it made sense that my kids would be raised by a parent who is highly educated and not someone else.
. . . .
OP, I think your resentment is coming from your DH being unemployed, rather than a division of labor. If he is at home with the baby, those are working hours. He is not putting less hours at work than you.
Anonymous wrote:
I used to work PT. On my days off with a one year old it is reasonable to: grocery shop, laundry, light house cleaning, dog care, taking the car to get a tire patched and dry cleaning errands.
Mowing actually isn't possible b.c it's not safe to have the kid around and you won't be able to hear them if they wake up from nap even with a monitor. I used to do quiet yardwork like manually pulling weeds so I could hear him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I stayed home with the baby, I took 12 credits in college, got A in all classes, did everything around the house except paying bills. Then I got a FT internship and was still doing everything thing at home.
Are you a woman? Men usually do what they think is important. Brain is wired differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I stayed home with the baby, I took 12 credits in college, got A in all classes, did everything around the house except paying bills. Then I got a FT internship and was still doing everything thing at home.
Are you a woman? Men usually do what they think is important. Brain is wired differently.
Anonymous wrote:When I stayed home with the baby, I took 12 credits in college, got A in all classes, did everything around the house except paying bills. Then I got a FT internship and was still doing everything thing at home.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t expect anyone (including DH) to get anything done while watching a toddler. He is also likely depressed or at a minimum facing a severely bruised ego because he isn’t getting interviews. Let things like the x-box go. What is going to happen if the lawn waits for another day? You have a 1 year old...this is survival time. Not everything has to get done now. For those that do, make a list, discuss it with DH rather than being a martyr and just doing it with a huge chip on your shoulder. You sound very controlling and judgmental. Flip it around, you get to sit at your desk, talk to coworkers, likely search the internet while DH is dealing with a 1 year old. Trust me, work is easier.
Anonymous wrote:I am increasingly resentful of how much I'm responsible for in my marriage. We have a one-year old.
My husband is currently unemployed, and has been for over a year.
I added everything up-- commuting, working, caring for my child at specific times so my husband can have time to job search, grocery shopping, cooking, paying all the bills, cleaning, laundry. It came out to 70 hours a week. With getting 40 hours of sleep in M-F (ha!), that leaves only 10 hours for everything else- getting showered and dressed, eating meals, etc.
What does the division of labor look like in your house? How many hours are "spoken for" during Monday-Friday? Is this what everyone does?
I'm not exercising or taking care of myself in any meaningful way. I am so, so angry all the time.
Weekends aren't restful. They're just for catching up on everything.