Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be increasingly filled with seething resentment towards DH

278 replies

endofmytether1000 · 22/05/2017 06:25

WARNING: extremely long! I have NCed, am a regular MNetter.

DS is 5 months old. I am on ML from a very high pressure, very high paid job. DH also has a high pressure, very high paid job that he doesn't particularly like and causes him a lot of stress (but that he will not change as he is too scared to).

DS was an ivf pregnancy due to anovulatory PCOS, and I then had HG in pregnancy which was reasonably well controlled by meds so that I could keep working. I went into labour early (37w) on my final day of work before ML started (groan) and had a very long and complicated delivery culminating in a crash section losing 2L of blood with a bladder prolapse. I am ebf and since 14 weeks DS has refused to take much from a bottle.

Because I'm ebf I have done all night waking/feedings since birth which I've been happy to do, no point both of us being up etc etc. DS doesn't sleep much during he day (the dreaded 40 minute sleep cycle!) but has been a reasonable sleeper for the most part - 1-2 night wakings and quick to resettle.

HOWEVER, now things are changing and I am becoming increasingly resentful of my dh. Am too tired to make this coherent but a few "highlights" - sorry for length but trying not to drip feed

  • DS has stopped being a reasonable sleeper/resettler and is now waking at midnight, 330am and 530am. He is not actually hungry but will ofc when held to my chest eventually go for my boob. DS has also started to fight against sleeping in his cot / he wants to sleep with us/on me! So it is taking c 1-1.5hrs to resettle him, which means the sleep time between feeds is more like 1-1.5hrs. DH sleeps through all night wakings with a pillow over his head, snoring heavily. If I shake him awake to help me with settling DS he will do so under great sufferance, and if he does get DS down in his cot he will immediately go back to bed with his pillow so that when DS cries out again (because he's not properly settled) I either have to go to him myself or shake dh awake again. So I end up just feeding DS as I can't really hold him off by myself. DH is such a heavy sleeper that he sets his alarm for eg 6am - it will go off, wake me up and then I have to shake dh awake. This morning I was awake from 330-530am and then dh's alarm went off at 6am and I had to wake him
  • dh constantly tells me that "we really need to push DS to take the bottle" however will not do anything to help me - I tried to introduce a dream feed with a bottle but I would go up to bed at 1030/11 after expressing and dh would be asleep with his head under the pillow and refuse to wake up. Similarly he will not commit to being home for either the 7am or bedtime feed for eg 2 weeks to get DS used to a bottle. So I have to try to give it to DS myself and obviously he won't take it from me.
  • on weekends I do almost all of the child care. Dh will take him if I specifically ask but only for the minimum amount of time I ask for (eg yesterday I asked him to look after DS whilst I had a "quick bath" - I was having a nice soak and after 40 minutes dh came up to the bathroom and said "I thought you were only having a quick soak, when will you be done?"). If I want him to look after DS for multiple periods he will claim he "has to do some work today" and disappear to his study.
  • dh will not use his brain AT ALL with DS - he will literally do exactly what I tell him and no more. Some recent examples - he gave DS a bath last night (he does this 1-2 nights a week), I lay out all DS sleep clothes whilst he baths him (as he "doesn't know what he should be wearing") and I put his sleeping bag on the bed. DH put it on backwards and inside out "because that's how you left it". FYI I don't care about it being on backwards but wtf?! This man has a masters degree and runs big complicated business projects at work. More seriously he has given DS too much calpol in the past because "you didn't tell me there are 2 doses in the sachet" (it's written clearly on the packet). I am so tired of having to ALL the thinking for him.
  • similarly I have to do anything related to DS care eg I am looking for a full time nanny at the moment and I am doing all searching, interviewing. I research the cot and all the various bits of kit he needs. &etc
  • I do not get paid ML past the first 6 weeks (crap industry) yet I am still funding 50% of all our household expenses. This includes paying rent, all bills and expenses plus 50% of a mortgage on a house we are currently renovating and will move into. I have told dh that I think this is unfair and he keeps promising that we will "sort it out" but it is never the right time to talk about it
  • our sex life is non existent as dh has lost his libido. We had sex once in the third trimester of my pregnancy and have had sex once since he was born. Before that it was slowly slipping to once a month territory. I am trying not to pressure dh but he literally has no interest in me at all and i find that really hard.

On the other hand, I do have help - I have a part time nanny 2x a week for 4 hours. Dh keeps saying "get more help" but it is difficult to find part time help plus ofc DS doesn't take a bottle so it doesn't really free me to do much during the day as I always have to be available to feed.

All this is coming to a head I think because I now have chronic sleep deprivation - I haven't had more than 4 hours straight sleep since DS was born and the last 3 weeks not more than 1.5 hours at a time. I had zero maternity leave pre baby (literally went from office to hospital) and had a very stressful run up to leaving plus ofc was still vomiting from the HG so was not well rested going into this. Plus I have had a very slow recovery from my section and have not been able to do sufficient amounts of exercise to help that. I feel like I am doing childcare 24/7, shouldering 50% of my financial obligations and do not have a functioning marital relationship, whilst my husband basically continues with his pre kids life and is perfectly happy. I am going back to work in 6 weeks and am beyond stressed about it. Sometimes when I am trying to settle DS at night and he is snoring next to me I want to commit violence. But I also know i am hormonal and sleep deprived so am not sure what to do about it.

Not sure what I really want from this post other than somewhere to vent! Thank you for making it this far :)

OP posts:
Mustang27 · 22/05/2017 10:24

Wow neotrad just wow!!! The rule of thumb is it takes two to make a baby so the care also takes that. Nobody is pathetic for needing help with looking after their baby day or night.

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 10:25

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 10:26

Why should she not be able to rely on the baby's father, an adult man, to help?

Even if he works during the week, is he also away at weekends? Confused

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 10:27

It's absolutely obvious from the OP that she isn't coping, but rather than owning the fact that she isn't coping, she is taking it out on her husband. Madness. Get a nanny.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 10:28

Sooo no thoughts on DH helping at weekends neo? What do you think about the fact he can't manage to get his own child dressed?

Seriously, have I woken up and found myself in 1850?! What pathetically low expectations of men you have neo.

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 10:29

The DH, sensibly, is owning up to his own and his wife's limitations. It's the OP who is being stubborn and unrealistic.

daisygirlmac · 22/05/2017 10:29

Neotrad stop trying, nobody is listening Grin

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 10:30

I have an amazing DP because I have very high expectations. I am also realistic about pressure.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 10:34

The DH, sensibly, is owning up to his own and his wife's limitations

Is he? Where?

corythatwas · 22/05/2017 10:47

NeoTrad Mon 22-May-17 10:29:42
"The DH, sensibly, is owning up to his own and his wife's limitations."

His own limitations being (as per the OP) that he can't look after his own toddler at weekends without having to be badgered into it and even then needs constant instructions and drops the ball the moment he is allowed to. Hmm

Will the child grow up thinking how sensible his dad was not to get involved in doing things with him during his spare time? If you read the OP, this is about far, far more than the night feeds.

motherinferior · 22/05/2017 10:48

His limitations appear to mean he refuses to have anything to do with his son.

For those saying "you should have discussed it" - I kind of think it's a given, when you agree to co-parent, that a basic level of competence and mutual commitment to parenting is assumed. Not "oh I can't put the baby to bed".

FATEdestiny · 22/05/2017 10:49

It's absolutely obvious from the OP that she isn't coping, but rather than owning the fact that she isn't coping, she is taking it out on her husband. Madness. Get a nanny.

I absolutely agree.

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 10:49

No, this isn't about anything other than the usual MN frenzy every time some woman can't cope and thinks her DH should be picking up all her pieces with neither proper instruction nor recognition for any form of legitimate human limitation.

OrlandoTheCat · 22/05/2017 10:51

My DH was a lot like this...worse actually. I can't really remember him even holding DS much before he was 6 or 7 months, nevermind bathing him! And he certainly never changed a nappy before DS was about a year old.
DS is now 2.5yrs, and DH has grown into the role of daddy slowly but surely. He really has come into his own now that DS is a toddler and will take him out to the park etc for hours on end, or soft play every weekend. He is a really fun, involved daddy who doesn't spend the time he's looking after DS fiddling on his phone etc.
The first year especially was hellish for me. Dh slept in another room for 7 months. blah blah blah.
But, I don't understand why you're so dead set against buying in help, seeing as you can afford it. Just to get through this period and make you feel less ghastly.
I do think it's mean that you're still expected to contribute 50% financially at the moment....your DH should recognise that you're doing all the heavy lifting at home at the moment and take the burden off you a bit elsewhere in the best way he knows how (ie. financially)

yourcarisnotadiscovery · 22/05/2017 10:52

NeoTrad helpful?! not just her DH but father of her baby who should want to help her. IVF is hard, coming to terms with an actual baby is hard and so is having to deal with all this without help from the father

FATEdestiny · 22/05/2017 10:56

The DH's failings (and they are failings) is a red herring. The actual issue is the OP's unrealistic expectations of motherhood and that shes not coping.

She talks of wanting a nanny to give her time away from baby. This is part of the problem. She needs a nanny to teach her how to cope.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 10:59

She talks of wanting a nanny to give her time away from baby

My DS is at nursery today. It's ace. I love him to pieces but it's hard work being a mum. It's not a crime to want time away from your baby, nor is a sign you're not coping ffs Hmm

Foxley11 · 22/05/2017 11:01

NeoTrad
No, this isn't about anything other than the usual MN frenzy every time some woman can't cope and thinks her DH should be picking up all her pieces with neither proper instruction nor recognition for any form of legitimate human limitation.

Actually I'd say it sounds like the OP is doing a grand job of coping, and her DH is the one not coping, expecting his DW to pick up the pieces, not respecting that she has limits and sometimes needs more than 40 minutes alone.

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 11:01

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

AyeAmarok · 22/05/2017 11:01

I actually felt angry and a bit like I wanted to bash your DH round the head with his pillow full of pebbles just reading your OP.

I also think this is quite deliberate on his part, and why the fuck are you still paying half the bills?! From savings, I assume? What does his extra money get spent on?

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 11:01

If you think the OP is coping, God help her!!!!!

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 11:03

It's not hard work being a mother once you know what you are doing.

Yes it is. I know exactly what I'm doing thanks. It's still hard. Even if your DC sleeps well (which mine does), having to allocate the mental space to another person 24 hours a day 7 days a week is hard emotionally.

If you don't feel like that then great but the vast majority of parents I know feel like this. They don't have PND or anything like that and they are coping fine. Objectively parenting is hard.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 11:04

Neo what specifically is the OP doing which suggests to you she hasn't got a clue what she's doing and she isn't coping?

NeoTrad · 22/05/2017 11:06

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

MoominFlaps · 22/05/2017 11:07

What do you mean she cannot manage her baby at night? How is she not managing?

She's tired because her baby wakes up. Y'know, as five month olds do Confused