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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:
lynntheyresexpeople · 29/10/2021 12:18

Honestly if you put as much thought into a plan for your future, as you have whining about how awful your life is on this thread, you could get something planned and sorted.

I know that sounds harsh, but come on! We are 900 something comments in, you've had a myriad of advice and support/sympathy, and all you have done is complain about being bored looking after your child, and how much you hate your husband.

Ok, fine - you aren't meant to be a SAHM and your Dh is a dick - we know that now, you've said it continuously for 40 pages - so DO something about it!

Notonthestairs · 29/10/2021 12:19

I dont picking apart the Op career trajectory is helpful. It keeps the Op in the past.

What matters now is the choices she makes for her future.

SpinsForGin · 29/10/2021 12:19

There is so much bullying going on in this thread it's quite sickening to read.
If you don't believe the OP then report the thread or specific posts.

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about these subjects:

SueSaid · 29/10/2021 12:19

'And apparently sacked from first job whilst she had debilitating pregnancy sickness'

I mean surely, surely such a vair important job would come with occ health support and HR policies and procedures.

You should have sort advice op.

mowglika · 29/10/2021 12:20

How can you maintain a research profile if your job was lab based? Some people are living on cloud cuckoo land here. OP I had exactly the same situation as you, academic career derailed by arrival of dc and it happens to a lot of women. Research is such that you need to be up to date and present in the field and if you are out for a few years looking after dc it’s very hard to find your way back.

There are scholarships/grants available for women wanting to re enter academia after an extended maternity break. Do your own research OP. Not sure why you need your DH help with this. Tell him he is responsible for dc on sat or sun and spend the whole day researching, applying, getting your CV and LinkedIn etc up to date. What’s stopping you from just walking out of the door and going to a cafe or library and spending the day productively.

You seem to enjoy playing the victim and you just want to come on here for a rant which is fair enough but it’s not going to get you where you want to be. You seem phenomenally stubborn that your dc will not be in paid childcare and your DH will do exactly half of all child related stuff.

Leave your bitterness and anger now and take some practical steps. The steps should be clear to you now but you seem to want to wallow in resentment. Take some responsibility it’s not all on your DH, this is the thing with playing the victim, you just want someone to blame for your inaction when really you could do it if you wanted to.

Also you sound like you hate your DH, honestly why are you still with him?

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 12:20

@Maiasaur

Are you saying that they sacked during whilst you were pregnant?So you didn’t get any maternity leave pay? I did get maternity pay. But maternity ended and I was still unwell as a result of birth injuries. So then I was on long term sick. And then I reached the limit of how long I could reasonably be on long term sick, so they terminated my employment.
So you returned after maternity leave? Or you immediately went from maternity leave to long term sick leave?
WeCalledTheDogIndiana · 29/10/2021 12:20

Have no idea why a couple of posters are trying to pick holes in your story. You've explained it several times and it makes perfect sense to me (and most people reading the thread, I think). Pretty sure they're being disingenuous, tbh

Oftenithinkaboutit · 29/10/2021 12:21

@SpinsForGin

There is so much bullying going on in this thread it's quite sickening to read. If you don't believe the OP then report the thread or specific posts.
I do not think the op is lying

I think the op needs to remove her rose tinted specs re her highly successful career and exciting prospects

EarlGreywithLemon · 29/10/2021 12:21

OP are you using the free childcare hours you are entitled to at the moment to send your son to nursery? You say you’re happy with sending him to nursery.

NeverHomeAlone · 29/10/2021 12:21

"Being at home with DC is fucking boring. I want to use my brain and I worked a long time to get the qualifications required to do that."

Ok. So do that. Work out what you need to do to make your ambitions possible (childcare!) and then do it. The past is the past.

WeCalledTheDogIndiana · 29/10/2021 12:22

So you returned after maternity leave?
Or you immediately went from maternity leave to long term sick leave?

Often she has explained this at least twice...

30block · 29/10/2021 12:22

Poor child, the way you talk about them is disgraceful.

As an aside lmao, if you were on £22k there is absolutely no indication that had you not had a child you'd be on the same trajectory as him, you're bitter and jealous because you have a fantasy that you'd be promoted at work, published here there and everywhere- when in reality you'd probably still be trudging along at the bottom.

Be proactive, instead of stewing and blaming your choices on someone else, leave him because he sounds disgusting, and get a job and sort out childcare instead of wallowing in how unfair life is.

Tomselleckhaskindeyes · 29/10/2021 12:23

I have been in your position OP. Twins did my career no good at all. My husband is/was a workaholic. It makes you bitter.
What I did is work 1 day a week just to keep my hand in. I am back to my original salary in a part time flexible job that is pretty high profile.
My husband was furloughed whilst i was an essential worker i think he saw for the first time what i had given up. He moaned about it at first but it was pointed out that it was my life. We have a much more equal carry on. He is the highest earner but i am fulfilled on a part time basis.

jellybe · 29/10/2021 12:23

Op divorce him. He sounds like an absolute nob and doesn't seem to care about you or DC. 50/50 custody so he has no choice but to parent and you can get back to your career.

Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse · 29/10/2021 12:23

OK OP, let's make a plan then...

What's the first thing you need to do?

BillMasen · 29/10/2021 12:24

Op ignore the posters who don’t understand academia, or professional reward and recognition bring important even if non financial

Please listen to those agreeing with you but saying “do something about it”

SpinsForGin · 29/10/2021 12:24

I think the op needs to remove her rose tinted specs re her highly successful career and exciting prospects

Why? Why is it your job to knock her down and make her feel crap about a job she is clearly passionate about and enjoyed? Who are you decided what constitutes a successful career?

SpinsForGin · 29/10/2021 12:25

@BillMasen

Op ignore the posters who don’t understand academia, or professional reward and recognition bring important even if non financial

Please listen to those agreeing with you but saying “do something about it”

This!!
BillMasen · 29/10/2021 12:25

@Ifyoudontlikeitdosomethingelse

OK OP, let's make a plan then...

What's the first thing you need to do?

Do this Perhaps on a new thread. Draw a line under the anger and bitterness on this one and have a positive, practical new one
SueSaid · 29/10/2021 12:25

'There is so much bullying going on in this thread it's quite sickening to read.'

Most of us can see the issue isn't the dh said this or that, the issue is there is a vulnerable 4yr old who the op 'wanted to abort' and who doesn't seem to be the priority amongst all the over analysing over what was discussed pre pregnancy. That is the sickening bit.

Childcare and a job is the solution, then decide to divorce or not.

KeepPortlandWeird · 29/10/2021 12:25

“I hate my husband because if it wasn’t for him I’d have got an abortion”.

You might as well leave him then.

You both sound resentful of eachother.

Not a great life for a child to grow up around.

Of course, your childcare/career issues will be doubly difficult as a lone parent then.

Women can’t have it all. You can’t have a full time career and children unless your partner is 100% committed to sharing the childcare or you can afford a full time nanny. You can’t have any of that either. But you didn’t want your baby in the first place, so you’re going to be resentful of everyone and everything for a looooooonnggg time.

WeCalledTheDogIndiana · 29/10/2021 12:25

Why? Why is it your job to knock her down and make her feel crap about a job she is clearly passionate about and enjoyed? Who are you decided what constitutes a successful career?

Hear hear

ouchmyfeet · 29/10/2021 12:26

I hear you OP and I sympathise. Quite shocked at some of the responses on this thread to be honest.

You need to get your ducks in a row, but you know this. If you are scientifically minded have you thought about an analytical career in a less niche field? Accountancy might work for you. Training is a large demand on your time but totally do-able part time, will just take longer. Then you have a qualification that's in demand, with plenty of opportunities to work part time/flexibly if required(to suit your childcare circumstances) or to be your own boss. Equally if you are career driven there are plenty of high profile opportunities too and a well worn path to leadership roles.

I'm not surprised you're angry, I would be living in your situation. The impact that motherhood had on my still makes me angry 12 years on and that's with a supportive partner who helped me get my career back on track.

NoSquirrels · 29/10/2021 12:26

I think the op needs to remove her rose tinted specs re her highly successful career and exciting prospects

Success in academia is not always (or usually) financial, Often. And ‘exciting prospects’ is very individual.

Regardless, OP is where she is, her husband is where he is, they have a child together and they all need to meet everyone’s needs fairly.

Analysing the past will get them all nowhere unless it comes with a realisation that the future needs to be different to the expectations that were first set-up.

Life is messy. Shit happens. Everyone clears up as best they can and moves forward trying not to make those particular messes again.

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