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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

I need to rant about my DH- he pisses me off so much !

247 replies

namechanged2002 · 28/02/2021 11:15

He's so fucking useless I can't stand it. Or is it me ? Do I expect too much ?

I have a one year old and went back to work when he was 7 months old. I had a nanny for a bit but it didn't work out. DH works out of the home in more physical job.

I do the laundry ( it's mostly his shit)
I cook
I clean
I look after the baby

He's so useless. He just can't be bothered. Leaves his shit everywhere and then complains he can't find stuff when he's trying to get dressed. His wardrobe is a horror show. I'm not surprised he can't find stuff. He complains if I haven't cooked dinner that he ' has to fend for himself '. That dinner is always a ' massive deal ' and it's not in my psychy ( sorry don't know how to spell ) to have dinner / cook every day. I cook most days by the way, as I need to for my child. He complains I always make the same thing and actually said I am a rubbish housewife the other day. I said hell yes I am and I didn't sign up to be a housewife and carry everything on my shoulders, as well as working full time.

Even on days where he looks after the child a bit ( like today ), I just can't rely on him. He makes a huge mess. Is grumpy all day. Can't really be bothered to play / interact and is constantly wanting to put him down for a nap. He doesn't enjoy it in my opinion.

He leaves shit everywhere. It drives me insane. Laundry is piled up, he just chucks it on the basket. I've argued with him so much lately and he said ' you won't be happy until I do everything '. Is it really so much to ask for him to sort his clothes out and not to leave his shit everywhere ? I'm really at the end of my tether with it.

It's like the days he's actually here and ' helping ' are worse and I get so angry and worked up. It's better when he's not here and at work. He is not ' helping '- half of this life is HIS responsibility. His moods when he actually does give me a small break, don't even make it worth the break. He just ruins my day with his damn moods.

I know it's my fault. I shouldn't stand for it and I try not to. I've been fighting so much with him but he just calls me a nag. He doesn't get it. I'm really unhappy and tired and I just need a break.

OP posts:
arethereanyleftatall · 28/02/2021 14:54

So:

  1. You don't need him financially
  2. Your dc doesn't need him
  3. He's not nice
  4. He causes you more work by being there.
  5. He causes you more stress by being there.

What, exactly, are you staying with him for?

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 28/02/2021 14:54

[quote namechanged2002]@Feedingthebirds1 I know gaslighting but it's interestingly difficult to recognise it when it's being done to you. A part of me still thinks that I am a nag and that he is trying and I'm just negative and horrible in my depressive state. [/quote]
Oh lovely.

  1. Nagging is male entitlement speak for "don't ask me to do something I haven't done despite you asking me because I can't be fucked to do it and you're making me uncomfortable because I haven't done it yet"
    Don't fall for it.

  2. He "wouldn't let you" go on anti-depressants. That's abuse in its own right. He's almost forcing you to continue being depressed so that he can abuse and blame you for it - that's disgusting behaviour on his part.

  3. It's NO surprise that you're negative and depressed since he's a lazy fucker who is doing nothing to support you and everything to undermine you.

Ugh. Sorry - I know he's your husband and so on but really, I can't see the point of him at all. He doesn't even like your baby by the sound of it!!

Whatsnewpussyhat · 28/02/2021 14:56

Him telling you not to take the meds is a massive red flag. Why would someone who supposedly loves you not want you to get better.

Feedingthebirds1 · 28/02/2021 14:57

[quote namechanged2002]@Feedingthebirds1 I know gaslighting but it's interestingly difficult to recognise it when it's being done to you. A part of me still thinks that I am a nag and that he is trying and I'm just negative and horrible in my depressive state. [/quote]
Then let me (an outsider) tell you that you are not a nag, he is not trying, and you may be being negative and depressed but that's because of his behaviour and all the stress he puts you under. You wouldn't be negative and depressed if he wasn't such an arsehole. This is not 'all your fault', that's him trying it on as a get out of jail free card to make you shut up.

This isn't you, it's him.

dottiedodah · 28/02/2021 14:59

If you are financially independent ,then I honestly dont know why you are still with this guy! I rarely say LTB on here .But I cant work out what you are waiting for!Sure Divorce can be hard ,but do want to live like some sort of 1950s housewife but work as well? The women then ,often had little choice but to work inside the home , as jobs for women were hard to come by and it was accepted that society wanted women on the back foot as it were.

crazychemist · 28/02/2021 15:02

@namechanged2002

It just didn't bother me as much before the baby. I had a cleaner and allowed the flat to become a mess. Got deliveries all the time and just lived my life. I didn't really foresee how it would feel after the baby. I know that's pretty dumb, but I thought he would sort himself out.
I get this. My DH doesn’t sound anything like as bad as yours, but he is a pretty lazy sod about housework sometimes! He almost always leaves his laundry on the floor and has to be told to empty the dishwasher (his job) every single time! Every week I have to tell him it’s the night the bins get done..,, etc etc. (In his defense, he does it once reminded and does DDs bathtime and bedtime while I handle the babies, and did school run before lockdown, so he’s not totally feckless!)

In all honesty, I didn’t really notice I was doing the lions share before we had kids. I’ve always just got in with stuff if it needed doing. It was only on my first maternity leave that it started to really annoy me because I realised he didn’t have the same attitude as me so wasn’t picking up the slack at all.

If you have a different attitude towards housework, that’s probably never going to change. You need to decide If this is something that you can accept or not. Either way you need it to not make you unhappy - if you can accept it and get through it, you don’t want it to spoil what is good about your relationship. If that sounds too hard for you, then you have to choose between leaving him or being miserable for the rest of your life. It’s in your hands.

TurquoiseDragon · 28/02/2021 15:05

OP, I'm getting the impression that when you first posted, you thought you'd be told to buck up and crack on with doing everything.

But it's pretty much unanimous that the real problem is your H.

A lot of your issues will disappear when he's out off the picture.

And he will be gone, eventually, because your resentment is clearly beginning to show. Once the resentment has set it, it's pretty much over.

Do yourself, and your child, a favour and start the ball rolling now.

Jfsrhkkydcb · 28/02/2021 15:07

He's a misogynist with no respect for you.

He thinks he does his "fair share" by barely lifting a finger because he views your "share" as being to do everything at home and child-related.

He thinks it's unfair that he, as a superior man, should have to do any of the things you expect to split between the two of you as equal partners. Hence kicking off and leaving a trail of devastation behind him to punish you when he does something he considers your job.

He won't change. These are his core beliefs that he feels entitled to act upon. This is how he wants his life.

So the question is at what point you take control of your life and leave him? That's the only way things get better for you. Not by arguing in circles with him or making chore charts.

billy1966 · 28/02/2021 15:10

No wonder you are depressed.

You married and had a child with a waster that you are actually paying for.

Help yourself OP, and wake up.to the factbyour life is only going to get worse staying with a la,y waster.

Flowers
Jfsrhkkydcb · 28/02/2021 15:10

OP, I'm getting the impression that when you first posted, you thought you'd be told to buck up and crack on with doing everything.

I think a lot of posters in shitty relationships post hoping/expecting to be told it's normal and that the only problem is their ability to tolerate it.

WizardOfAus · 28/02/2021 15:15

Hi OP. I’m going to copy and paste this message here. It’s not from Mumsnet, but a similar site. I think you need to read it as it 100% applies to you (even the anti depressants). Unfortunately, there is only one solution and that is to leave. You must for your own health, sanity and that of your child’s. Good luck.

(This post is specifically geared at women in heterosexual relationships.) Ok ladies, we need to talk.

Every few weeks there's a post that makes the admin team spend a day debating if we should say something or not. These posts are always on the same theme; husbands who are not pulling their weight.

Well, after just reading a post from this week were a whopping 4 HUNDRED of you commented in solidarity with the OP I've decided today is the day we say something.

Household chore inequity and child care inequality is a form of domestic abuse. It forces women to work themselves into exhaustion and illness, whilst men buy their free time with female exhaustion.

No one wants to see themselves as being in an abusive relationship. It means acknowledging that someone you love, someone you married or committed to, someone you chose to have children with is taking advantage of you and that hurts on so many levels.

it's heartbreaking to acknowledge, but acknowledge it we must.

If your husband or partner is capable of working at their job without being micromanaged and given extremely explicit instructions, then they are capable of contributing fairly at home without being given extremely explicit instructions and micromanaged. If they act like they are incapable they are gaslighting you.

If they were capable of living independently without living in a rat-infested pigsty without any clean clothes and living off pizza, then they are capable of ensuring children are fed and clothed, groceries are done, and household chores are shared equally. If they act like they are incapable they are gaslighting you.

If they claim they love you and yet your health comes secondary to their leisure, they're gaslighting you.

If they claim they can't possibly function and it would be unsafe for them to work with broken sleep, but it's totally fine for you to have to work, drive and do all the household chores and childcare on broken sleep, they're taking advantage of you.

If they say they are going to get up in the night and help but when the time comes the pretend to be asleep/complain, they're gaslighting you.

If they don't even actually try to settle the baby and had bub back almost immediately with "they just want you:", they're gaslighting you.

If your health, sanity, sleep, work, or self-esteem are suffering because you are the one doing everything, whilst they leverage your exhaustion into their free time, they're abusing you.
Like other forms of abuse, it will not get better on its own. It's not an accident.

So please ladies. Please stop laughing it off as "just men"

It's not just men. It's purposeful.

It might not be consciously purposeful, but it is still purposeful. They know they can get away with it.

one of you being on antidepressants because your husband won't help raise the children he fathered is one too many. 400+ of you being exhausted to the brink of PND and breakdowns is heartbreaking for us to watch.

You can't fix this by night weaning. Or sleep training. Or bedsharing, or chore charts, or even kicking hubby into the spare room. There are only two things that will fix this - therapy, or leaving.

I am sorry.

Bilgepumper · 28/02/2021 15:18

@namechanged2002

We split the cost of everything really. Well expect the food which I pay for the majority of the time. And nappies and toys and clothes for my child.
So you pay for his food, his baby's food and everything to do with his baby? As well as doing the lion's share of everything else?
Feedingthebirds1 · 28/02/2021 15:18

@Jfsrhkkydcb

OP, I'm getting the impression that when you first posted, you thought you'd be told to buck up and crack on with doing everything.

I think a lot of posters in shitty relationships post hoping/expecting to be told it's normal and that the only problem is their ability to tolerate it.

Or that they'll be given a magic formula that will make things better overnight.
namechanged2002 · 28/02/2021 15:19

I knew what I was going to get when. It's probably the third time I've posted similar things and I get the same responses. In all fairness, I did not even realise how bad it was until I first posted. I was very very depressed at the time and depleted. Things have improved a lot since then. I used to not bother him at all with anything and just did everything.

Now he does a lot more. But clearly still not enough as I keep getting extremely frustrated and depleted / resentful.

OP posts:
Whatsnewpussyhat · 28/02/2021 15:24

Wow WizardOfAus
Now that's the kind of thing that should be taught to teenage girls, along with coercive control etc.

agreyersky · 28/02/2021 15:25

@CallistoSol

BINGO!

There’s always a poster who’s falling all over themselves to blame the OP, no matter what their useless twat of a husband/partner has done. It is endemic

Absolutely. There is absolutely nothing a man does, no matter how shit, that can't be blamed on a woman.

AtSwimTwoBerts · 28/02/2021 15:26

Absolutely. There is absolutely nothing a man does, no matter how shit, that can't be blamed on a woman

Bollocks. She's not responsible for his actions, she is responsible for her own. And someone has to balance out all of the "poor you, nothing you have ever done has ever contributed to anything in your life, its all him" bullshit.

BaseDrops · 28/02/2021 15:29

He thinks all of it is your job. That it is your job to facilitate his existence, because he thinks like this he feels hard done by when he does any part of “your job”. He would deny that because it doesn’t fit with his idea of himself as a modern man but it is still the reality. If it wasn’t he would be saying the things he is saying.

Get rid. The sooner the better. It’s easier on your own than with someone who doesn’t pull their weight.

Ellie56 · 28/02/2021 15:42

@namechanged2002

It's not you; it's him. He doesn't realise we're now in the 21st century and he's expecting you to be a 1950's housewife. F**k that.

Instead of listing the dubious benefits of staying with him, why not list the benefits of not staying with him?

I'll start you off:

  1. A lot less laundry
  2. no more mess in the kitchen for you to clear up after he's made food for himself 3)no more "shit everywhere" - you will just have a nice clean house exactly as you want it
  3. No more grumpiness to put up with
  4. No more feeling resentful
  5. No more stress
  6. No more arguing
  7. A happier and less toxic environment for your child to grow up in
  8. You will be happier

I could go on...

wandawombat · 28/02/2021 15:42

So are you wanting us to say he'll change?

Devlesko · 28/02/2021 15:44

What a shame these men are really good partners and the woman knows they we be a fantastic dad, because they do 50% or more before the kids come along. Perfect partner and father material, no red flags at all Confused

namechanged2002 · 28/02/2021 15:44

@wandawombat no. Just looking for support to give me strength.

OP posts:
JungOwlWan · 28/02/2021 15:48

I would stop doing his laundry. Do yours and the baby's and tell him he is getting a job done for him there.

Tell him he cleans the bathroom and the sitting room.

You. Clean the kitchen and your side of the bedroom.

Cook every second night.

Never ever ever do his share.

MammaSchwifty · 28/02/2021 15:51

@namechanged2002
Just looking for support to give me strength.

You are already strong, look at everything you do and all you have achieved. Are you looking for the strength to unburden yourself?

Jux · 28/02/2021 15:51

It's hard to work out what he contributes other than half the bills, and even that's not half the reality of your costs.

You could ask him to calculate how much it would cost him in child support if you were to separate. You can suggest he grows up... You can ask him what he'd do if you weren't around and he was left with a baby, a ft job, a whole house to keep, and a nanny to pay for; without you.

Actually, I'm not sure there's anything you can do which would have an effect on him. You KNOW that if you separate he'll just get his mum to do it all. Rid yourself of this useless boulder, at least you'd get every other weekend off.

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