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Covid, twatty DH and how my life has been destroyed

999 replies

Maiasaur · 28/10/2021 08:30

I had a bad pregnancy and was off sick for ages, then on maternity, ended up getting managed out (aka got rid of) because I needed more time off due to my health. I had surgery to fix some issues. DC was approaching two when I felt recovered enough to get a new job. Everything was lined up.

Then Covid happened. Nurseries were closed. Family childcare was unavailable. Someone had to stay at home with DC. Of course in the 2.5 years since I got pregnant, DH had been promoted. So his logic was that we needed to keep his stable well paid job in preference to me starting a new, lower paid job with no security. So I had to give up my job offer and ended up bearing the burden of childcare through repeated lockdowns.

Finally nurseries reopened - but due to the pandemic, places were in short supply. My job offer was long gone. Employers still had staff on furlough and working from home, their finances were tight, so they were cautious about hiring. At this point I’d been out of work for over 3 years. DH got promoted again.

This was the point at which the problems started. DH started to whinge that everything was still volatile, bubbles were bursting and kids were having to isolate, so someone needed to be available to look after DC. And of course he was so important now, he couldn’t possibly do it.

I got a job and arranged a childminder for pick ups and drop offs. Childminder got Covid so DC had to isolate for 10 days, my new employer was not pleased. Then DC got chickenpox so that was more time off work. Covid at nursery again, more time off - and I got fired because I wasn’t able to attend work reliably. During this time DH wouldn’t take a single day off work. This is when he started to say “we can’t put the job of the highest earner at risk, when you earn the same as me I’ll take equal responsibility for DC”.

Of course I’m never going to catch up with him now because I’m four years behind career-wise. So that basically means all childcare has been dumped on me. And if all the childcare is on me I’m never going to be able to catch up am I?

So let’s skip past the fact that I’m angry, resentful, hate DH and often go to bed at 8pm to avoid him. Someone has to parent my DC so I’m currently looking for a job that can fit around that and offer flexibility for sick days. My previous career won’t. So I asked DH to help me assess my options and figure out what I could do that would suit our current circumstances. He was really nasty and said no, it’s not his responsibility to sort out a job for me, he can’t tell me what to do. I said fine - fuck it, I’ll just go back to my career then and you’ll have to deal with the fallout in terms of childcare. Of course he’s not happy with that either, I’m a nasty selfish bitch, and he doesn’t deserve that when he’s working hard to provide for us all.

Honestly, what am I supposed to do here? I have more chance of holding down a job now that the 10 day isolation is no longer required for close contacts. But I’m just getting zero help. He’s staying later and later at work, he’s gone from finishing at 5, to 6, and now he isn’t leaving the office till 6.30. So that puts all of the cooking on my shoulders too because he isn’t home in time. And now he’s refusing to do any grocery shopping or meal planning because I’ll be cooking so apparently I need to sort it, he’s already doing his share by working.

Honestly I’m on the verge of divorcing him to force him to take 50% custody. I agreed to have a baby because we earned the same and would both work and share childcare. I didn’t sign up to be stuck with the whole lot and unable to work full-time just because he earns more.

OP posts:
Maiasaur · 29/10/2021 11:52

Annual tuition for part time phd very very unlikely more than £5k a year
Yeah it was around that. £5k of my salary went on fees and I got about £15k paid to me.

OP posts:
SueSaid · 29/10/2021 11:52

@GoodGrief100

If you put half your effort into finding a job and getting DC into childcare as you have spouting hate about your husband and parenting responsibilities you'd likely feel much better about your situation being proactive. You just seem to want to moan, whinge and bitch about what a hard hand you've been given and do sod all to fix it. What a pointless thread.
Exactly. It's all a bit diddums.

Do something, take control. Stop the incessant whining about unrealistic '50/50 childcare'. Pay a childminder.

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:53

Especially if you’d been as successful as you say you were

Interested in this thread?

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2kool4skool · 29/10/2021 11:53

So if we were all to agree your husband was an A Hole would you feel better?
Then what?
Your poor child living in this poisonous environment. You owe it to her to sort this out by having a calm and grown up conversation with your DH. If you can’t come to an agreement then go your own way but don’t for one moment think that’s going to be easier. Quite the opposite. Not least on your child.

Tittyfilarious81 · 29/10/2021 11:53

@Maiasaur what's his job op ?

Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse · 29/10/2021 11:54

Also... How have you not worked enough to be entitled to a state pention? Are you v young?

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:54

8 years
Did a phd
Very successful whilst there

Paid peanuts (even taking in to account the Phd cost)
And no job offer

Maiasaur · 29/10/2021 11:54

You don’t need to go for a promotion. They are offering you a more senior job to keep you!
They did. They switched me into a permanent job on £22k. Soon got rid of me when I suffered ill health because of pregnancy though.

OP posts:
AmaryllisNightAndDay · 29/10/2021 11:54

My advice is: get your contraception nailed down. Because your husband has form for using a baby to keep you at home and in your place. At the moment you are totally furious and focussed on making him change so as to create "fairness". But eventually you will give up on that and start trying to build up a bit of independence, to get a little bit of your own life back.

And there is a huge risk that as soon as you get anything going that allows you to become a little bit independent, your husband will start making nice again. He will start saying nice things, reassuring you, even doing one or two (easy) helpful and supportive things. And your anger will drain away and you will start hoping and believing he has changed, that he will let you have some life back. Then you'll have a nice time together, you'll have sex, and guess what - if you don't have contraception in place you'll be due for another "accident" and right back where you started, only several years older and with two children instead of one.

So make sure you are contracepted to the eyeballs from now til forever. No more of his "accidents".

Tee20x · 29/10/2021 11:54

What he seems to be forgetting is the only reason that he has been able to be promoted again and again throughout the years is because you have had to sacrifice.

Ugh what is it with these men. I would do as you've described & leave you're better off without him and I don't know whether a relationship can come back from this.

He clearly doesn't care about you or your future & seems to think you're some kind of house help there to sort the cooking and children.

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:55

@Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse

Also... How have you not worked enough to be entitled to a state pention? Are you v young?
35

You should have been accruing whilst at work
And then on maternity leave
Any then with child benefit

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:56

@Maiasaur

You don’t need to go for a promotion. They are offering you a more senior job to keep you! They did. They switched me into a permanent job on £22k. Soon got rid of me when I suffered ill health because of pregnancy though.
A £22k senior role Bloody hell
Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:57

And then they got rid of you because of the morning sickness?

Op - it doesn’t look like they were that impressed

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 11:57

They have you a £2k pay rise
After completing a 5 years Phd!!!

DampSquidGames · 29/10/2021 11:58

Would you pay for a part time housekeeper to do a lot of the household tasks?

NoSquirrels · 29/10/2021 11:59

My armchair diagnosis is that you have significant unresolved trauma from your pregnancy and childbirth experiences, coupled with a husband who obviously wasn’t parented that well himself and has controlling tendencies with a side order of misogyny.

You can’t move forward because you’re stuck in an emotionally traumatised place.

Deal with that. Then move on.

Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse · 29/10/2021 11:59

I'm 33. Been a SAHM for 10 years, I'm still eligible for a state pension. I'm not sure why OP isn't?

SpinsForGin · 29/10/2021 11:59

oftenithinkaboutit the work situation the OP describes is quite common.
Not sure why you're trying to catch her out? Do you like kicking people when they're down?

Autumndays123 · 29/10/2021 11:59

@SpinsForGin

But you can still stay active in the research community. How do you think people managed it during lockdown? It's just excuse after excuse

Hahahahahah
look at the data around academic publications during lockdown. Men's output increased while women's stalled and was almost non-existent. This was die to women taking on more of the childcare and homeschooling
Have you any idea how challenging it is to 'stay active' as a researcher when you aren't employed in a relevant/related job? It's pretty much impossible especially when you don't have childcare.

Actually yes I do. I left academia after completing my PhD and got a non-related job in the private sector. I worked full-time from home during the lockdown but maintained a research profile in my free time for something to do! And yes I have children
Maiasaur · 29/10/2021 12:01

Paid peanuts (even taking in to account the Phd cost). And no job offer
I stayed on for another three years. In a job. Which they offered to me. At a salary which was about average for a new graduate in the north at that time.

OP posts:
Tailendofsummer · 29/10/2021 12:01

It is amazing me thay with so much evidence of dh-twattery on this thread, the Op is getting such a hard time. You don't need to have a "stellar career" to want to work and earn your own money. Being a single parent would be hard but would not involve the resentment of being with someone whose needs will always come first (and no I'm not talking about the toddler).

DottyHarmer · 29/10/2021 12:02

The OP is definitely down, but some of the situation sounds a bit off. The previous job doesn’t sound all that. She got fired again. The dh is the devil incarnate yet she’s still with him. Won’t consider paid childcare. It would take a psychiatrist to sort all this out.

TractorAndHeadphones · 29/10/2021 12:02

@EarlGreywithLemon

Duchess as I said I work in a good job and have an academic background. But I hate the sneering at parenthood. Parts of any job - no matter how great - is also monotony and drudge. That’s the truth. Conversely parenthood - and childcare generally - involves being intellectually curious, flexible, creative, problem solving, resilience, you name it. And I’m not sure why work admin for example is in any way superior to changing nappies. Both are less than glamorous things we need to do. And i personally prefer to have a child ask me a question six times than an annoying colleague doing the same thing because they’ve not read an email properly. Children are a lot funnier for starters.
But parenthood isn't a job. It's just something people do. Whether they put kids in nursery, or are SAHM they are all parents and raising their kids. The sneering is directed towards people who think they're doing a full-time job (like the ones who post CEO of the House/full-time mummy on linkedin). People do get paid to take care of kids so in that sense it is a job. But then not comparable to being a lawyer for instance. Saying that all SAHM staying at home to raise kids involves all of the wonderful skills you mentioned is bollocks. WOHP also have to do all of that.
Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 12:02

@Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse

I'm 33. Been a SAHM for 10 years, I'm still eligible for a state pension. I'm not sure why OP isn't?
She is
Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse · 29/10/2021 12:03

That why most people have told her to leave. He obviously makes her extremely unhappy. So why stay?

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