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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask how your partners have behaved during lockdown?

73 replies

rosieposie13 · 11/06/2020 13:04

Lockdown seems to have highlighted this more but lots of the behaviour so many of my friends husbands / partners are exhibiting is exactly new - lots of general complaining in the past about “wife work”, husbands not contributing to running of the house and being a bit lazy - but now that people are stuck in the house pretty much 24/7 with them so it seems more obvious and also seems to have been elevated to higher levels of twattery and in some cases just outright cruel behaviour.

Apart from myself and one other friend literally every other friend I have just seems to have been treated in one way or another like shit by their other halves.

There are just so many examples and it all feels super depressing. My friends are smart, talented women who seem to be wasting away with partners who won’t do even their fair share, never mind go above and beyond for them.

A friend who is still working full time from home but whose furloughed husband refuses to take on looking after their 3 year old son during working hours because he wants to “relax” if he’s not at work and is constantly playing on an Xbox.

The friend who is working from home, as is her partner, but all home schooling and general life admin, house cleaning etc is falling to her and if she asks her husband to keep the kids entertained for half an hour whilst she has an important work call he sulks and whines at her.

My friend whose dad died during lockdown (not from coronavirus, he’d been ill for the last year) - she’s obviously devastated, particularly as she didn’t get to see him the last couple of weeks of his life. She asked her husband if he could take a day or two off work just after her father had passed away to help look after their children and support her. He told her that as she is a SAHM it was her job and she needed to just get on with it. When she pointed out that you would get compassionate leave from a job if your father he died, he stormed out of the house and was sending her messages saying she was ridiculous and needed to grow up and stop being so weak.

And possibly the worst example, a work colleague who has had cancer surgery during lockdown. She had run out of painkillers and asked her husband if he could go get some more for her. He refused to go because he was in the middle of watching a film. I can’t fathom how anyone could know their partner was in pain and refuse to go get the medication that would relieve that. He eventually did go but this was after she was apparently sobbing in pain and begging him to help her and only after a bunch of shouting and slamming doors from him.

I could post loads more examples of perhaps less obviously horrible things but just so many instances of husbands / partners refusing to help, not taking any responsibility for their own children and just generally seeming to go out of their way to make the life of person they are supposed to love harder.

I just feel utterly deflated that so many of my friends seem to be treated this way. I guess I’d like to hear that this is unusual because the prospect that the majority of women are treated like this is so depressing.

Is this generally how it seems across the board? Or have I got some unusual friendship circle where so many of my friends seem to be in relationships with completely inconsiderate arseholes?

OP posts:
Laaalaaaa · 11/06/2020 14:57

Yay men bashing! I’m sure there are plenty of women out there ‘not pulling their weight.’ my husband has been a hell of a lot more productive than me - hope he’s not on another forum calling out my laziness 🙋🏻‍♀️

CanofCant · 11/06/2020 15:01

Laaalaaaa I think the positive responses outweigh the negative actually.

TeenPlusTwenties · 11/06/2020 15:02

My DH has been ace. Both our DC have struggled and he has taken the load of the elder's problems whilst I have done the younger. Quietly dependable.

BertieBotts · 11/06/2020 15:02

He's been really good, calm and supportive and just got on with things. I feel very fortunate/grateful to be locked down with him rather than some things I've been hearing from my friends as well :(

vanillandhoney · 11/06/2020 15:02

The same as always. He's been working throughout whereas I've been at home - so I've taken all the domestic stuff while he works, but he used to do 50% anyway so it hasn't really made much difference here.

He's a good egg, though :)

Laaalaaaa · 11/06/2020 15:04

@canofcant I agree, but I think the original post was intended to be goady and it’s backfired.

Stompythedinosaur · 11/06/2020 15:05

We've continued like a team as normal - we juggle meetings around each other as far as possible and share the cooking and housework. He also built a pond for my ducks which was nice.

makingmiracles · 11/06/2020 15:11

Bloody brilliant, he’s a good one anyway but has been great stepping up and taking over most domestic stuff-I think he just generally likes to be busy, can’t sit still for long etc so I’ve hardly done any cleaning or washing for example. He’s ocd so the only thing that has got on my nerves is his constant rearranging of cupboards etc but a small price to pay for someone who is great in all other ways. I’m glad he’s back at work now though as furlough had become one long drink fest and although he’s fine drinking-still does housework etc and doesn’t get nasty I was really starting to worry about the effect on his liver.

I definately think there will be more divorces/breakups post covid, we’ve heard a lot more rows etc from neighbours, even from those who are normally very quiet.

GalesThisMorning · 11/06/2020 15:14

I don't know any men behaving like the ones in the OP, although my ex probably would have I suppose.

My husband has been the same sane and kind person I married. He doesn't help me so much as he pitches in with child rearing, money earning and household running same as I do.

TwentyViginti · 11/06/2020 15:15

@theyoungandtherestless

Urge them all to LTBs! Especially the one who needed the painkillers, good god.
Fucking hell yes! point them in the direction of Relationships on here. MN vipers will guide them!
calmama · 11/06/2020 15:16

I think lockdown has pushed some couples apart and others together. My marriage is rocky. Lot of issues. But I would say lockdown strengthened things for us. We have both managed to work through it, though with reduced hours, and managed to coordinate our hours to ensure our one child is cared for so we’ve had a far easier run than many people. But I’ve been pleasantly surprised by how (relatively) well we’ve got on considering we’ve been stuck together more. He’s brought me beautiful breakfasts and lunches the days I’ve worked. And coffees and snacks throughout the day. Then cooked at night. Come up with cool things to do with our toddler than extend beyond cartoon watching. I’m pleasantly surprised as had I given it much thought I would have imagined it going the other way...

calmama · 11/06/2020 15:17

*that extend beyond

Sameold2020 · 11/06/2020 15:24

My dh has been really great, and our relationship is far from perfect normally. He's been picking up more with the house and the dc than he should, as at times I've been anxious and unable to focus, or having a low day etc. He's just ploughed on really. Working full time, doing home schooling, diy, shopping, cooking, bike rides with the dc. I've been quite lazy in comparison, just struggling along. I used to think he was a right cunt sometimes, but he's really come through.

TimeWastingButFun · 11/06/2020 15:34

My husband has been fantastic, we've shared the kids' schooling and everything else, and he's done loads of jobs on the house and garden. I realise I'm lucky though!

BastardGoDarkly · 11/06/2020 15:42

Those poor women. Seriously, what's the point of any of those men?

I've worked (7-1am) all the way through, husband was furloughed for 7 weeks.

Started off with me home schooling, while he pottered, doing little jobs. I had to say, erm, before this goes on, I have to tell you this isnt going to work, I need you indoors, helping with school work and housework, potter all you want after that

He was brilliant from then on, took over all the housework, I didnt do any, I did majority of schooling, but it worked.

Hes back at work now, and it's much harder.

FudgeBrownie2019 · 11/06/2020 15:45

He breathes quite loudly and rounds off calls with a jolly "we'll put a pin in this, shall we" which makes me a teensy bit serial-killer but aside from that he's great.

He's great when we're not in lockdown, to be honest, so it hasn't changed much. I'll happily admit out of the two of us he's the nicer one; I'm a bit of an arsehole in lockdown.

Imissrealcoffee · 11/06/2020 16:00

Lockdown has really been a turning point for DP I think. We we are both young and had only been living together 6 months, before I did most of the house work and all the cooking as he worked nights and I struggled with it and dealing with his moods. We are now both furloughed and he has taken this time to work on his mental health and really made a huge u turn on everything. He now does most of the cleaning, has started cooking for us and most importantly brings me coffee in the morning everyday Grin

I’ve hated lockdown and didn’t realise how much of a workaholic I was. He has taken on this mental burden for me and we are much closer from being stuck inside for this time.

Mummadeeze · 11/06/2020 16:07

I was dreading lockdown as my partner was horrible before this started but he has completely transformed into a nice, helpful, communicative person as the weeks have gone on. It has been such a surprise. He was working nights in a nightclub before and not really sleeping and now he is furloughed. I think the lack of sleep actually had driven him a bit mad before this.

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 11/06/2020 16:12

Mine has been bloody amazing. I am really struggling at the moment - the result of depression, insomnia (that has worsened during lockdown), weight gain (due mainly to the depression but also partly due to having to take steroids last year), and poor mobility - and dh has done so much extra stuff, to support me.

He has had six week’s gardening leave because he was changing jobs, but even since he has been back at work (wfh), he is still doing loads - he lets me sleep,in, in the morning to catch up on sleep, and he is doing a lot of the cooking as well as most of the laundry and all the ironing.

He is amazing.

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 11/06/2020 16:13

Should have said - he is amazing, and I do not deserve him because I am such a failure.

FuzzyPuffling · 11/06/2020 16:15

My DH is brilliant. Thank goodness I have him around.

ErickBroch · 11/06/2020 16:16

We have no kids so life is easier. House is a mess as we are both living in it 24/7 but both being equally lazy so can't complain. We have days to clean the house and we both do it together (although I have to supervise and direct lol). I was also very ill for 3 weeks and he looked after me, did all the cooking and washing up and waited on me hand and foot the whole time.

BernardsarenotalwaysSaints · 11/06/2020 16:19

DH went back this week, after 11 weeks off.

We've not killed each other & our marriage is still as it was. He's been good at helping with getting the dc to do their work & has re-landscaped the back garden. He pulled his weight with housework, has cooked 50% of the meals & done all the food shopping (as in put in the tesco order, collected it & got any other bits we needed). So yes, gone well in general & only had a few 'moments' with each other that I think are to be expected given the odd circumstances.

He normally does as much as he can though, but normally works long hours, with lots of driving & regular stints away.

covidco · 11/06/2020 16:19

DH has done less housework than he would normally (and he doesn't do much normally) BUT he has done considerably more childcare and as a result is having to work late evenings weekends, so I think it is fair. We are both still working full time and have limited paid childcare (both key workers, mainly from home though).

FudgeBrownie2019 · 11/06/2020 16:20

@SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius Flowers I'm sure you're absolutely not a failure at all.