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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Poor DH not getting a break......but it’s fine for me to not have a break?!

121 replies

QueenofmyPrinces · 20/11/2019 10:15

I can’t tell if I’m overreacting?

I’m a nurse and my husband is a teacher.

I work two days a week, I work my shifts two days in a row, and I’m out the house for over 14 hours each day. I leave the house at 6.50am and am usually home at about 9.30pm. I’m obviously very worn out by the time I get home on my first day, and by the end of my second day I’m shattered.

My husband works 5 days a week, leaves the house at 7am and is back by 4.15pm.

We have two children, a 5 year old and a 2 year old. The 5 year old is at school and the 2 year old goes to a childminder on the days I work.

My husband goes to the gym about three evenings a week once the children are in bed which he can obviously only do because I’m at home to sit with the children. He also goes 1-2 mornings a week before work, so he leaves the house at about 5am so I do all the morning routine myself when the children wake up at about 6am.

The only time I get to do something for myself is for 2 hours on a Friday morning and the 2 year old goes to his childminder during that time to enable me to do it.

On the 5 days I’m not at work I do all the housework jobs, I do the school runs, the homework, the bath times, the bedtimes and I obviously have the 2 year old during the day. My two year old also still wakes 1-2 times a night which I get up and deal with.

When my husband comes home he will cook us our evening meal.

My Manager spoke to me earlier and asked if I could swap my shifts this week to work this coming Saturday and Sunday as they are short staffed. I checked with DH to make sure he/we didn’t have any plans and he said it was fine to work the weekend.

I have since bumped into my FIL, it came up in conversation and he did not look happy and implied that it wasn’t really fair as it meant my DH “wouldn’t get a break.”

I felt so angry and thought, and when the hell do you think I get a break?!

I’m either doing my back to back shifts at work or I’m with the children and doing the day-to-day parenting that I listed above.

He then said he would have to take the children for some periods over the weekend so DH can have some rest and also so he can get to the gym when he wants to go .

He’s never offered to have the children for some periods during the days when I’m at home with them though so that I can have some rest or pursue a leisure activity.....

My DH was away last weekend at a sports fixture, from Friday night through to Sunday night and my FIL obviously thinks solo parenting is fine when the mother has to do it, but God Forbid the father has to look after his children for a weekend whilst the wife has to work.

During the weekend DH was away I didn’t see my father in law once, he didn’t pop round and offer to mind the children for a few hours so I could have some downtime, but as soon as my DH has got to solo parent for two days in a row, suddenly he’s falling over himself to look after the children so DH can have a break.

My DH doesn’t have a problem at all with having the children on his own for both days, he’s really hands on and it wouldn’t even cross his mind that he deserves rest at the weekend. He understands that we both work and the children are both of our responsibilities and we just crack on with it as a team.

I don’t expect any help from FIL at all, that’s not the point of the post, it’s just the complete double standards of it all that’s made me feel so annoyed.

He will now doubt pass underhand comments to my DH about how bad he’s got it because he shouldn’t be expected to look after the children at the weekend when he’s “been at work all week”.

His attitude has really pissed me off

OP posts:
Dustarr73 · 20/11/2019 13:35

I had best just suck it up then and accept I don’t deserve any down time because I’m not biologically related to my FIL.

Your Fil doesnt owe you downtime.Your dh is in early enough for you and your ds to go out for 1 on 1 time.Hes in early enough for you to go for a coffee on your ow,

It seems to me you are blaming your Fil because its easier than blaming your dh.

And i know this might be way out there,but have you actually asked your fil to babysit so you can get a break.

MigGril · 20/11/2019 13:35

It's a generation thing I think. When DH told his parents that he was taking time off to look after the kids when I work PD days then no they couldn't possibly let him use his pressure holiday time for that. They will do it sometimes, but weren't wholly reliable anyway.

It still really annoyed me though as they have never helped out when it was just me needing some help. We did ask.

TheOrigFV45 · 20/11/2019 13:40

Tell your DH you want some downtime.

My FIL is a total muppet. I have always worked full time. My children have been in full time childcare pretty much since I returned to work after mat leave (did have a period of p/t with DS2).

My oldest son is 20. He STILL phones at random times in the working day and asks "are you at work?". He STILL asks whether DS2 goes to school (he's 10). He bangs on about how SIL doesn't like to use childcare for her son so FIL and MIL often get called to mind him. Never had a single offer of that with my 2. I just let it go.

I'm sorry you are unable to drive. Do you have some plans for how you will maintain your friendships and relationships? Surely people who care for you will come and take you out?

QueenofmyPrinces · 20/11/2019 13:41

I do kind of think that maybe your DH has had a moan to him about the shift swap and not having a break otherwise why would fil feel so able to approach the subject with you?

I had only told my FIL about me working all weekend about ten minutes after I had spoken to my manager about it. In fact I had only just text my DH to let him know my Manager had confirmed the shift change when I bumped into FIL in the street.

Over the last 5 years since having the children there will have been 100’s of occasions where I’ve worked full weekends so it isn’t as thought it’s a new occurrence - hence why I was so surprised by my FIL’s response. You’d think I had told him I was off to Spain for two weeks or something.

OP posts:
ArgumentativeAardvaark · 20/11/2019 13:41

I don’t understand why you didn’t calmly point out the double standard to your FIL. It could be done tactfully, with good humour. Why say nothing and allow him to go on thinking as he does? It doesn’t have to turn into a huge conflict/source of resentment- just have an open conversation at the time.

QueenofmyPrinces · 20/11/2019 13:44

And i know this might be way out there,but have you actually asked your fil to babysit so you can get a break.

No I haven’t - but I would never ask anyone to look after the children for me just so I could have a break. I will ask for help if I’ve got a genuine reason, like a hospital appointment or something, but not just so I can have a break.

His sexist attitude just annoyed me.

OP posts:
Dustarr73 · 20/11/2019 13:47

@QueenofmyPrinces then ask Pil,hes not a mind reader.He will either say yes or no.

Halestorm · 20/11/2019 13:48

From time to time MIL makes the occasional reference to me spending 'all DH's money'. Considering that our dual income ratio is about 60:40 I know she's wrong. She knows she's wrong and that my contribution is a bit more than pin money. So she just gets an eyeroll and a reminder that it's 'our' money I spend. We get paid at different times so sometimes it's me paying for stuff, sometimes it's him. So just for a laugh if he needs my card or cash in front of her I give him what he needs, pinch his cheek and tell him to go buy something pretty for himself just to see her face. Grin

QueenofmyPrinces · 20/11/2019 13:49

I'm sorry you are unable to drive. Do you have some plans for how you will maintain your friendships and relationships? Surely people who care for you will come and take you out?

I do get visitors but it’s just hard isn’t it when we all have children and jobs. A lot of my friends are either single parents or have younger children so it was just always easier for me to go to them because my shifts patterns allowed it and I had a husband who could stay at home with the children.

And again, Saturday is the only day I’m at home and that’s generally when most people want to spend time with their families.

People have been amazing and doing what they can, but it’s not easy when they have their own lives.

It’s more having to give up on what I enjoy doing that has hit me the hardest.

OP posts:
Pantheon · 20/11/2019 13:49

YANBU. Also, nothing to do with FIL, it's between you and your DH. That would bug me!

SunshineCake · 20/11/2019 13:49

As long as your dh pulls up his idiot father there is no issue once FIL is told to butt out and explain his ridiculous ideas.

BeanBag7 · 20/11/2019 13:50

@GrumpyHoonMain I was a teacher and used to leave work at 5 every evening and rarely did work at home. We had a really good scheme of work set up in my school to minimize individual planning and HOD who was realistic about marking load so didn't insist on marking every single piece of work. You can be a teacher and "do the job properly" without doing ridiculous hours if the school are helpful and supportive. Unfortunately most aren't.

QueenofmyPrinces · 20/11/2019 13:51

Grin Grin Grin @ halestorm

Thankfully FIL has never made any comments about our financial arrangement. I don’t think I would be able to bite my tongue if he did Grin

OP posts:
1300cakes · 20/11/2019 13:54

Ah, he sounds exactly like my FIL - a sexist old fart. He is always making comments about my DHs brother and his wife. Eg - BIL and SIL go away for the weekend, kids are babysat at home. FIL comments "it's terrible how SIL is leaving those kids all the time, she is so lazy".

I don't confront him as it's pointless. But I do have fun taking the piss out of him to his face, and seeing how long it takes him to notice.

Fandoozle1 · 20/11/2019 13:56

In my own experience, OP - not many people give a shit if women are tired. I remember clearly having had my emergency c-section and all the trauma that came with it and MIL saying “oh poor DH is really tired with all this back and forth from the hospital” - the hospital is ten minutes drive from our house, hardly back breaking compared to being cut open for major surgery! Hmm

diddl · 20/11/2019 14:12

FIL does presumably realise that his son gets many breaks facilitated by you?

He doesn't think that the gym at the weekend is his own & only, does he?

WhatchaMaCalllit · 20/11/2019 15:03

I've read the first 100 posts on this (I'll move on to the next lot in just a moment) but the elephant in the room is how much time your DH gets to go to the gym and you only have 2 hours.
Your DH is partly at fault here @QueenofmyPrinces - and you are letting him have all this time to go to the gym at your expense.
It is very possible that your DH could give the gym a miss for the one weekend that you're not around and see just how much you actually do when you're there. Instead he will delegate his parenting to grandad and still manage to get the downtime he wants to go to the gym.
You will need to have a conversation about how much time your DH gets to do his hobbies/pastimes versus how much time you get. If he is as considerate as you're making out, he will not begrudge you a few more hours per week and take up the slack in doing the household chores that you're doing.
Your FiL is an absolute dinosaur when he says stuff like that to you and I would imagine that he knows full well that it pushes your buttons which is why he does it.

saraclara · 20/11/2019 23:45

Nobody I know in teaching, senior or junior, finishes before 6-7pm

I used to get to work at 7:20 am and leave at 3:45 or 4:45 on meeting days. Then work at home. Other colleagues would come in later than me in the morning and stay later. Some would stay significantly later so they didn't have to take so much home. As long as you're there for the structured time (it's made clear what times you need to be on the premises) whether you do the non-contact work at home or on the premises, is down to the individual teacher.

Countryescape · 21/11/2019 11:29

Why aren’t you off to the gym in the mornings or evenings? You don’t have as much balance in your relationship as you think. Your DH has got it sweet! You, not so much.

TheOrigFV45 · 21/11/2019 11:56

Country the OP cannot drive.

QueenofmyPrinces · 21/11/2019 12:45

You don’t have as much balance in your relationship as you think. Your DH has got it sweet! You, not so much.

We had a great balance when I could drive but sadly, now my licence has been revoked it has put an end to me doing most of my activities I enjoyed and being able to go and see my family and friends.

I feel like I’m stuck in the house all the time which is another reason why my FIL’s comment irked me - if anyone needs some time away from the house and the children it’s me Sad

OP posts:
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