My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

To think DH’s income belongs to us both?

314 replies

Illeana · 09/12/2019 10:39

I’m a SAH (we can’t afford childcare, I’ll be returning to work when DC goes to nursery). DH (father of DC) works and supports us. I have no income other than DH’s salary.

I bought DH a birthday present, then he was really horrible to me and I snapped at him, you don’t deserve me to buy you a present when you’re so nasty. He lost his temper and said you didn’t buy it anyway, I DID BECAUSE YOU PAID ON MY CREDIT CARD.

AIBU to think it’s OUR money and OUR credit card? I’ve told him he won’t be getting a Christmas present because I apparently have no money to buy it with.

OP posts:
Report

Am I being unreasonable?

1308 votes. Final results.

POLL
You are being unreasonable
14%
You are NOT being unreasonable
86%
ThreeAnkleBiters · 04/01/2020 16:14

@Pretzelcoatl

Wow you really have a dim view of children don't you - if it's all about finances just don't have kids - that'll save you huge amounts of money.

I think Op should work to give her independence from her horrible husband but just because the family would be very slightly better off financial in ideal circumstances with OP working (and in reality they probably wouldn't when you factor in extras - late fees when you're stuck in traffic, petrol parking, extra food costs because no one has time to cook properly etc). It would not be better for the family. The kids will be ferried from nursery home, in front of a screen or playing alone while OP cooks dinner, given bath and dinner then go to bed, the house will be more chaotic as housework will need to be done in the evening and on weekends meaning again less attention for the kids.

OP is enabling her DH to have his career - if he did his fair share at home he wouldn't be able to keep up a career of that kind. It would simply be impossible. Love and Care is more important than finances to a family. They could live in a smaller home in a cheaper area, he could have fewer hobbies and evenings out. The kids cannot grow up healthy and happy without love and care. It is vital.

Report
daydreambeleiver · 04/01/2020 16:17

I always had a joint account until my marriage imploded. Conversation about money is too premature in my new relationship but I have already indicated I think keeping finances separate is odd

Report
Pretzelcoatl · 04/01/2020 16:37

@ThreeAnkleBiters

“ Wow you really have a dim view of children don't you - if it's all about finances just don't have kids - that'll save you huge amounts of money.”

No, I have a dim view of adults who expect to be cared for as children, especially when they make the decision unilaterally.

”OP is enabling her DH to have his career - if he did his fair share at home he wouldn't be able to keep up a career of that kind. It would simply be impossible.”

This is so delusional - her DH’s career is facilitating her lifestyle, not the other way around. No children, no house, no nothing based on what the OP herself said her earning potential is. It’s because of her DH’s career and his continued commitment to it that children, house, and savings are possible. If you can’t see this, then I truly don’t know how to communicate with you.

”Love and Care is more important than finances to a family.”

Really? I’ve yet to see any legislation passed that allocates love for children’s benefit, but there is certainly legislation than allocates finances. 🤔

But please explain, without saying or implying that DH (or men in general), how the child will lose an iota or love or care if the OP goes to work once her DH comes home in the evenings.

” They could live in a smaller home in a cheaper area, he could have fewer hobbies and evenings out. The kids cannot grow up healthy and happy without love and care. It is vital.”

I have no idea what sort of career or life you’ve had, so please forgive me if I’m telling you what you already know: the more stressful or responsible your job is, the more important it is to have some way to shrug that weight off it is. Simply not being at work doesn’t usually do it, which is why hobbies are vital - otherwise the stress accumulated faster than it is removed, and that affects the job (unable to do the work), mental health, home life... everything.

As to the smaller house in a cheaper area... you know full well than smaller houses in cheaper areas are the properties most scarce to find. But ask the OP if that’s also what she wants - I suspect you’ll find it isn’t.

Report
FredFlinstoneMadeOfBones · 04/01/2020 17:19

@Pretzelcoatl

You're contradicting yourself. So according to you who obviously no so much about the intimate details of this couple's life. His demanding job necessitates him spending time on his hobbies? In that case how will he take on all the extra responsibilities at home when OP goes out to work? He won't be able to pursue hobbies when he's cooking dinner and hoovering up will he?

Sounds like the DH is the one being cared for like a child - dinner cooked, his childcare all sorted, house cleaned for him. Or do you think all that magically happens without any effort?

Your point about kids not needing love and care is just ridiculous. Kids don't need a luxurious lifestyle provided by business trips etc they do need the basics and love and care.

Report
Pretzelcoatl · 04/01/2020 17:36

@FredFlintstoneMadeOfBones

“ You're contradicting yourself. So according to you who obviously no so much about the intimate details of this couple's life. His demanding job necessitates him spending time on his hobbies? In that case how will he take on all the extra responsibilities at home when OP goes out to work? He won't be able to pursue hobbies when he's cooking dinner and hoovering up will he?”

There is no contradiction - I said that OP should go off to work after DH comes home. And I should add that I don’t understand the implication that cooking and housework is a time-intensive job - if your home is such that you are spending hours each day cleaning it, and your place isn’t submerged in a swamp, you’re doing something wrong.

”Sounds like the DH is the one being cared for like a child - dinner cooked, his childcare all sorted, house cleaned for him. Or do you think all that magically happens without any effort?”

I think that if the DH could spend the same amount of time as the OP on cleaning, cooking and childcare with no loss of quality, but the OP going to work instead of her DH results in a loss of income and quality of life for everyone, then how they each contribute isn’t equivalent.

”Your point about kids not needing love and care is just ridiculous. Kids don't need a luxurious lifestyle provided by business trips etc they do need the basics and love and care.”

What’s ridiculous is that you’ve added “luxurious”, attributed it to me, and then used that to show that what I’m saying is unreasonable.

Kids need lots of things, and it’s only people who spend a lot of time watching television who lean towards the “love is all you need” fantasy.

Report
Dontdisturbmenow · 04/01/2020 17:38

There is always a counter argument in such thread that if the IP went back to work, they would still do all the housework, care etc...because their oh don't do it when they are sahm, but maybe they don't do it because the sahm insists they are doing a job too and contributing as such and therefore why would they do it? However, they might be very happy to do so if the OP did work.

In my experience, all sahm are so because they really don't want to work. OP admired it, yet is trying to blame her oh for being unreasonable.

Some men are very happy to bring in the whole family income even if it means giving up on luxuries, some do nothing in the home, some are happy to help too. But many Jen see this as unbalanced and think a couple should have more equal roles but at home and outside.

These are things that should be discussed before setting family together, at least in terms of principles.

Report
Londonmummy66 · 04/01/2020 21:43

@Pretzelcoatl - in what parallel universe will the DH (who is clearly you - stop snooping on your wife's MN account) be able to maintain exactly the same lifestyle if OP works the graveyard shifts? He will have to give up his freedom to stay late whenever he feels like it and his hobbies - which you seem to think poor pathetic little men need after their hard day's graft...

FOr a start being a SAHM is actually far more demanding than hard graft as a partner in a major city firm (and I know as I have done both) so if anyone needs a break and some hobbies its the OP and not the DH. Secondly you can just imagine how it will pan out

DH - Hi OP I need to work late tonight
OP - sorry DH but I am working from 6pm until midnight
DH- well you'll just have to chuck it or sort out childcare as my job is the important one

Just never going to happen.

Reality check time for you poor little snowflake who has all the stress of going to work in the mornings.....

Report
PitterPatterOfBigFeet · 04/01/2020 22:54

Kids need lots of things, and it’s only people who spend a lot of time watching television who lean towards the “love is all you need” fantasy.

No one said love is all they need. People said love is something they definitely need. Your comments implied that it really made no difference if DC were cared for by a loving parent or a teenager being paid £5 an hour.

On the one hand you say that this husband (YOU) needs to relax after his demanding job, on the other you say his wife should be out working leaving him to do all the childcare and evening housework. Apparently he also goes on business trips so who is meant to care for the child then? Or is OP going to get some mysterious job which can be picked up and dropped on a whim?

The issue is clearly that you absolutely can't stand your wife and aren't particularly bothered about your child either.

Report
Pretzelcoatl · 04/01/2020 23:35

@Londonmummy66

“ in what parallel universe will the DH (who is clearly you - stop snooping on your wife's MN account) be able to maintain exactly the same lifestyle if OP works the graveyard shifts? He will have to give up his freedom to stay late whenever he feels like it and his hobbies - which you seem to think poor pathetic little men need after their hard day's graft... “

His freedom to stay late... in what parallel universe is it a treat to stay even later at work? “Man, I’ve loved being here all day so much that I’m going to stay EVEN LATER because of how awesome it is!”

As for “poor pathetic little men”, he’s poor because his do-nothing wife - can hardly call her a partner - takes advantage of what he provides to have life her way, and he gets nothing out of it. He’s pathetic because he’s allowed himself to be trapped in a relationship like this. But yes, stressful jobs need valves to blow off the steam. Any psychologist will tell you that. Any article written in a big font you may have seen on Facebook will also tell you that.

”FOr a start being a SAHM is actually far more demanding than hard graft as a partner in a major city firm (and I know as I have done both) so if anyone needs a break and some hobbies its the OP and not the DH. Secondly you can just imagine how it will pan out “

I sure can - they should switch. OP can go live the cushy life by working and being the sole financial provider, and her DH can toil in the mines of domestic servitude. He’ll suffer and beg her to switch back, and with a newfound appreciation for how hard she’s had it he’ll gratefully go back to work, possibly as a newly-converted feminist in awe of how hard home life is.

”Reality check time for you poor little snowflake who has all the stress of going to work in the mornings.....”

You have convinced me. Help me save OP by having her trick her DH into doing all of the home stuff while she relaxes at work on Easy Street!

Report
PitterPatterOfBigFeet · 04/01/2020 23:39

@ posterPretzelcoatl

If you need to blow off steam so much after work and sometimes stay late then how will you do all the childcare and extra housework OP won't be doing while she's at work in the evening?

Report
Pretzelcoatl · 04/01/2020 23:48

@PitterPatterOfBigFeet

*” No one said love is all they need. People said love is something they definitely need. Your comments implied that it really made no difference if DC were cared for by a loving parent or a teenager being paid £5 an hour.

No, people said love was the most important thing, so I was responding to that. And because of what they were responding to, it was clear they were negating that the OP’s DH’s contributions were as nothing.

But the OP can, on a whim, pay a teenager to play with the kid and put them to bed. There is no equivalent to this for the DH.

”On the one hand you say that this husband (YOU) needs to relax after his demanding job, on the other you say his wife should be out working leaving him to do all the childcare and evening housework. Apparently he also goes on business trips so who is meant to care for the child then? Or is OP going to get some mysterious job which can be picked up and dropped on a whim?”

Maybe she could get that mysterious job from the poster who said that “love is the most important thing a child needs” who also said that they could simply move to a smaller house in a less desirable area - an idea that doesn’t touch on any of the issues raised and shows a huge disconnect from reality.

As I noted in a previous post, if you are a SAHP and are finishing that housework is a constant thing, something is very wrong and an expert should be brought in to remedy whatever has screwed up.

I also never said her DH needs to relax, I said he needs to get rid of the stress that high-end careers inevitably produce, which is what hobbies are for: you’re doing something you enjoy, and that makes it easier to continue shouldering the burdens of the parts of life that you are required to do.

If that still somehow means that neither of them would be available some night for the child, that’s where the teenager for hire comes in.

”The issue is clearly that you absolutely can't stand your wife and aren't particularly bothered about your child either.”

If the OP lives in the UK, then she’s not my wife and her child isn’t mine. But I feel bad for the entitled workshy “partner” he’s saddled himself with and hope that she starts acting like a contributing adult before she kills their relationship dead.

Report
millymoo1202 · 05/01/2020 00:00

I really hope you have this in your deeds that you have paid off your half of mortgage with inheritance! I was a stay at home parent for over 10 years to enable my Stbex to work away and earn a high salary, then took mim wage jobs once kids at school. You wouldn’t believe the bull he’s coming away with now we are divorcing! I heard your husband’s comments over and over again

Report
Namenic · 05/01/2020 07:41

It seems like teamwork may have broken down in OPs case - which means that they can’t be efficient in getting things done.

They have different things they care about - eg OP is fussy about who looks after her kids and her DH likes/needs his hobbies - perhaps to help him continue with his job. Could they have counselling to help see other options?

@Pretzelcoatl - the correlate for OP paying teenager to put her child to bed is to have DH taking a less demanding job with less pay and doing more childcare so OP can work/study. Unless the DH is on minimum wage, this is an option (though may involve some upheaval as depends on the mortgage).

In the OPs situation I would prefer DH to take a less stressful job and share the childcare and housework while I re-trained/got a job. I have no issue with SAHPs - and have done it myself, but would never want to do it if DH said the stuff OPs DH said.

Report
SalmonFajitas · 05/01/2020 12:00

@Pretzelcoatl
You can't have it both ways - either you are the husband or you're making up a load of rubbish about a situation you have no idea about. If the husband's job is so stressful and demanding he has the option of taking a pay cut and getting a less demanding job and doing his fair share of the childcare while OP also works. He'll have to do more work around the house of course and won't be able to swan off to to do his hobbies whenever he likes.

You suggest that OP works evenings - but when do you think she's going to sleep? What will she do when her husband absolutely has to work late or pursue his hobbies which you claim are vital for him being able to continue to work (although of course you don't know him and have no idea what his job is.......).

I imagine what the husband wants is to have his cake and eat it. He wants to have a lucrative career while his wife sorts everything out at home. He wants the freedom to pursue his hobbies and social life whenever he wants and he wants all the money from his job kept for himself.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.