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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU workaholic OH & always on phone

38 replies

mumsurviving · 07/04/2019 22:34

AIBU? Appreciate any advice on the below please...xx
My OH & I have two kids under 4. We are together 7 years now. When we met first we both had busy careers, in the same industry which kind of brought us together. We fell madly in love and it was all very exciting, we even used to go on work trips to the same events etc.. he was (and still is) extremely hard working and v driven career-wise, and that’s one of the things that attracted me to him in the first place. Fast forward a few years, 2 kids later, I’m a SAHM & my life revolves around my family and keeping house in order and also regularly looking after my elderly grandparents. My OH’s life has not changed v much since we met, he works as much, and travels abroad the same amount as he always did (approx 1/3 of the year away). He provides for us, and encouraged me to leave my job which I couldn’t manage to juggle with the kids while he was away so much and with his erratic work schedule (often gone weekends etc) I liked my job, but felt maybe life would be less chaotic and nicer for my kids if I stayed at home. It is better for my kids no doubt, but now I do 100% of the household chores/household management/childcare etc. with kids going to nursery in the mornings.
anyway, my post is really about my OH and AIBU to expect him to put us first and dedicate some time to us as a couple and family solely, for parts of the week, as currently he is ‘always on’ for work, always available when the phone rings or an email comes through, day or night 24/7/365. When out with kids at playground or out for lunch occasionally as a family he will usually take out his phone and start emailing etc or answering calls to clients/anyone work related about non urgent stuff. I have a lot of family stuff going on at the moment and finding it hard to cope with, and spoke to him about needing his support and that when he is here with me/us as a family he often is ‘here in body but not in mind’ and not really available to talk to properly. The other evening I was having a talk with him and was quite upset about family stuff, and then I looked over at him and notice he had taken out his phone to check Twitter which really hurt me.
He says he loves his job and it’s not really a job for him, but I feel it is a job and family is much more important. He says I’m the one with the problem so I should come up with solutions and write them down for him. I would rather go back to work and earn money for our family if I thought he would ease up a bit and be more available to us but I know he won’t and I end up running myself into the ground trying to keep all the balls juggling while nothing much changes in his life.
I really love him, our kids love him, I so want things to improve but don’t know how else to help. Don’t want to separate (coming from divorced parents really don’t want it for my kids) Any advice welcome thanks so much xxx

OP posts:
RobinHobb · 08/04/2019 21:51

@Londonmummy66

Option 2:,Earn hundreds of thousands so you can have help and are not doing all the domestic work by default. This is the rabbit hole I went down and I am not sure it works at all. I didn't want a nanny looking after my kids (although cleaner was appreciated), and all the admin (insurance renewals, car MOT, bills etc) is still looked after by the "lady of the house" (hate that expression) even if you have a nanny. I don't know what the right answer is though...

lifebegins50 · 08/04/2019 21:56

Can I ask why you haven't married?

mumsurviving · 08/04/2019 22:24

@lifebegins50
Sorry if I was confusing, yes we are married! I should have used DH not OH, sorry!

OP posts:
mumsurviving · 08/04/2019 22:27

My gut tells me if I gave him that option he would go hell for leather with work even worse than at present, and we’d never see him!!

OP posts:
mumsurviving · 08/04/2019 22:33

@Quartz2208 am doing a lot of thinking now, don’t know if I am brave enough to give him an ultimatum
truthfully I would really hate for us to split up

OP posts:
Londonmummy66 · 08/04/2019 22:49

mumsurviving He cut back massively on the unnecessary time on the phone. Now he is usually home at a sensible time, spends some time with us and then catches up on emails etc for an hour or so later in the evening. It has got easier as the children are older as they are more insistent on their share of his time.

It did help that before children I had had a demanding job and had organised my work so that I could spend much of my time out of the office not dealing with the mundane (as opposed to critical) phone calls and emails etc. It did make it much easier for me to demonstrate to him that he was creating a negative persona in my eyes as someone unable to work effectively - ie Mr Inefficient , rather than my thinking that his work was so demanding and important that he was Mr Indispensible. I think it burst his little bubble to find that I didn't find his "on call" a sign of importance. Grin

He does have to work abroad quite a lot and he has a number of hobbies so it isn't perfect but if I think things are slipping I will offer him "advice" on how to organise his working life - and suggest that if he can't implement this then some of the hobbies have to give.

Londonmummy66 · 08/04/2019 22:54

Robin I didn't mind having help with the child care as well as the cleaning. I also took a leaf out of several of my neigbours' books and had my domestic help come in in the afterschool hours (3-6pm). I was lucky as my cleaner loved children so would often have the younger one playing on the floor whilst she did the ironing so I could help the older with homework/ get their supper etc.

ruthieness · 08/04/2019 23:00

You say that you would hate to split up but the reality is that you have - your lives are already separate.

The fact that your unhappiness is of no concern to him says it all....

if you want to stay together he has to decide to get interested in his family and to stop putting them last -

the phone thing is a problem - maybe start with a simple thing like going swimming together regularly as you have to be engaged.

Quartz2208 · 09/04/2019 09:19

londonmummy is right - this constant need to be working is actually a negative sign of inefficiency rather than anything else

talk to him first tell him exactly how you feel and see from there

CostanzaG · 09/04/2019 09:24

Of course he encouraged you to give up your job. That way his life didn't have to change one bit as he's now got a permanent nanny and housekeeper at home.

mumsurviving · 09/04/2019 20:12

Thanks everyone, haven’t stopped thinking about how to handle things all day & re-read all your posts.
Have made some notes to remind myself of key points and going to talk to him properly in next few days, when he is back from latest trip away. Wish me luck xx

OP posts:
yorkshirepud44 · 10/04/2019 06:57

Mine effectively prevented me from working by insisting we move away from all friends, family and support (and my pretty decent job) and then taking a job back where we'd come from..

He then moaned that I didn't contribute (beyond running the big house we'd bought and looking after 2 small dcs alone). The only jobs in our area were minimum wage ones which couldn't have covered childcare. He'd have been ok with this as it was the principle of it. Arsehole. I was ridiculously unhappy.

I couldn't win and have found it much easier to sort my career out without him being there to complicate things. His second wife has also given up her career.Sad

TotHappy · 25/04/2019 12:34

Did you have any luck op?

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