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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Is it just my husband who can't...

130 replies

Silverbook · 09/04/2023 11:37

plan or organise anything. Literally anything. It's so f@cking infuriating. I plan and organise everything - house/life admin, food, all finances, shopping, DC childcare, holidays, day trips, vet, car, house & garden upkeep etc If it's relevant we both work FT. Financially we contribute equally.

I often wonder what his life would look like if i wasn't here. I asked him once and he said that he's plan things then but why do it when I was able to. Part of me want to just stop but I don't want DC (or me!) to miss out

Overall he is a caring, hands on and hard working dad. I'm not disputing that but he is so unintentionally selfish with his lack of thought it drives me up the wall. I'm actually not even sure it is selfishness, he just seems happy to coast along and have no experiences whereas I really value experiences.

So next weekend I've booked short city break just for me and DC. I am aware of how petty this is but I'm so hacked off with him benefitting from everything.

OP posts:
OneStepOneStumble · 09/04/2023 17:56

BotterMon · 09/04/2023 17:27

I voted YABU because you need to delegate to him. If he doesn't do it, it doesn't get done. Why don't you keep the bits you enjoy and give him the bits you don't? No reason why he can't take on his fair share.

You are enabling him to be useless and you need to up your game rather than moan.

Delegating is still not an equal load. Can't he think of things himself rather than waiting to be told or asked? It's not equal if one of you is managing the other.

Inamechangedforthis23 · 09/04/2023 18:01

There was a thread a while ago about what would happen if there where no women and men were left to bring up the kids, it would get done just in a more basic level was the general consensus.

Inamechangedforthis23 · 09/04/2023 18:03

My ex is great at days out but my DS tells me his fridge stinks and his handtowels are always dirty .

AffIt · 09/04/2023 18:08

Silverbook · 09/04/2023 17:24

And ur post makes u look like u have delusions of grammar.

Brava, OP, brava! 👏

CleaningOutMyCloset · 09/04/2023 18:11

For me it's just additional selfishness... he would do it if he had to, but he's happy to leave it to you.

He likes the fact that he doesn't have to do anything other than what he wants to do - as he's happy to let you do it. That to me shows a complete lack of care, consideration and respect for you. You don't let someone you love carry the mental and physical load

GCWorkNightmare · 09/04/2023 18:14

adulthumanfemalemum · 09/04/2023 11:54

Yours is not the only one, mine is similar. He's good at some stuff eg planning and doing house DIY, cleaning, furniture buying, computers, phones, switching energy supplier etc. But days out and holidays and stuff for the kids and food, he's useless, I do it all. It's occurred to me before now that if I wasn't here the kids wouldn't do any extra curricular activities and would never have an Easter egg hunt or similar. I don't think it's unusual for this to be the case though. I don't really mind as I enjoy doing that stuff and not the house and cleaning stuff.

A little girl I teach lives with just her dad because her mum is dead and when the class talked about Easter egg hunts in the garden she said "there's never been eggs in my garden " 😢

DD has both parents here and there have never been eggs in our garden either. It’s not a thing for lots of people!

GCWorkNightmare · 09/04/2023 18:19

Silverbook · 09/04/2023 17:20

No I think having children just increases the mental load in a way you don’t realise until it happens. Because I had a very generous mat leave (16 months) I naturally assumed lots of the ‘doing’ and mental load which then they stuck when I went back to work.

DH was away 5.5 days a week when DD was born and for the next 16 months. I didn’t do everything that needed doing, and there was plenty for DH to do when he got home on a Friday night.

He planned an amazing surprise holiday for me before we married. He did more wedding planning than me and is now the one doing most of the mental load because it’s me working away.

Our circumstances were pretty extreme but I never, ever took the responsibility for doing it all. If it doesn’t need a vagina to do it, then it’s a shared job.

junebirthdaygirl · 09/04/2023 18:23

My dh was never great at organising activities for the dc. Then one year he ended up taking them on holidays on his own and they had a ball. Surfing everyday, gokarting, climbing mountains..they just loved it. They can do it if they have to and it's a pity they don't more as the dc would get a wider variety of experiences.
I think as women our mind is always turned towards family while men often just leave us to it.

Chessetchelsea · 09/04/2023 18:32

@AffIt - best response ever! Delusions of grammar 🤣

peanutbutterkid · 09/04/2023 18:39

I suspect many perfectionist MNers don't let their DH's do anything. Not a male-female thing, but a perfectionist-other conflict.

I totally know I don't live up to the standards my stbX expects (can't wait for the divorce to come thru). I think he's utterly irrational in 100 other ways, of course.

Treacletoots · 09/04/2023 18:39

The patriarchy has you well trained OP. Seriously though if you didn't do everything he'd have to pull his finger out wouldn't he?

Men only treat women like their servants because we allow them. I just wish a lot more women would realise this and tell their useless lazy men folk to fuck off and pull their weight more often.

summerlovingvibes · 09/04/2023 18:42

@Silverbook you're not the only one. Just been for a couple of nights to see my dad & partner. Literally did everything... thought about every single thing we had to take for the baby and toddler - black outs, bedding , all clothes and toys, food items etc. pram, sling, wellies and the kitchen sink etc etc etc . Had been packing for about 3 hours.

Husband managed to load the car because I literally out everything in bags on the doorstep. Then he loaded toddler into the car and forgot to put any shoes on her as carried her to the car (no idea why as she can walk just fine), which meant no shoes for the weekend. Only wellies.

On the way home again I put everything by the door at dads and he loaded the car... except managed to forget the massive sleepyhead in its clear bag which was right by the door and something I'd specifically asked him to load. When we turned back for it after my dads partner called 30 mins later he was a bit annoyed, to which I replied about having to think about every single thing and having asked to check he loaded it. He then tells me that he doesn't listen to everything I say 🙄 Infuriating.

Everything we do I have to plan. He used to be able to but now seems incapable of doing anything other that work, and childcare when directed.

briancormorant · 09/04/2023 18:50

I used to get fed up about how we worked as a family. My words were:
I am not saying I have to do all the work but it seems I have to think of everything or we would sit indoors doing nothing.
Adult kids still speak to me and DW & I have been together over 30 years.
Try and tough it out please.

FormerlyPathologicallyHappy · 09/04/2023 18:53

He’d marry again if anything happened to you. It wouldn’t take long for him to find another woman.

Women weep, men marry.

SammyScrounge · 09/04/2023 19:26

OP , you say he is a very hands on, caring Dad. That's worth a lot , in fact it's just about everything. What will the DC feel about leaving their Dad behind? You may get a reaction you didn't anticipate. Do they know they are going on a little holiday? Does their Dad know yet?

Favouritefruits · 09/04/2023 19:26

My husband is like this but I understand it’s not his forte I do all ‘life admin’ but he contributes in other ways like fixes things and tip trips I know it sounds very 1950s but it works for us. Does you DH do anything in the relationship?

DanceMonster · 09/04/2023 19:36

Favouritefruits · 09/04/2023 19:26

My husband is like this but I understand it’s not his forte I do all ‘life admin’ but he contributes in other ways like fixes things and tip trips I know it sounds very 1950s but it works for us. Does you DH do anything in the relationship?

How often does he have to fix things or go to the tip compared to how often you do all of the ‘life admin’?

Scottishskifun · 09/04/2023 20:08

My DH used to be crap until I stopped sorting everything out one day about a month before Christmas!
He asked after about a week what we were doing for it said no idea...asked what presents I had got for his family....response was nothing, what had I got for DS's advent again nothing (this was a lie I had a backup!) Etc he had a rant I told him he was a adult as well and therefore he could sort stuff too and I wasn't doing all of it anymore.

Low and behold he is capable now packs DS1 and DS2 nursery bag, holiday stuff, sorts presents, bills etc.

Your not petty OP hopefully it will be the lightbulb moment he needs!

electricmoccasins · 09/04/2023 21:35

It is more likely they'd quickly find a new girlfriend to do it.

I once worked for a male Headteacher who used to ‘get’ a new girlfriend every couple of months when his house really needed cleaning. He used to boast about it. The amount of highly-educated women that used to fall for it…

caringcarer · 09/04/2023 21:38

TheObstinateHeadstrongGirl · 09/04/2023 11:46

What I always notice with these lazy men is - they manage to hold down good jobs that involve planning. It miraculously can’t plan for dinner (because they have a woman to do it all for them)

This 100 times. He could do it if he had to but prefers to let you do it all. You are probably good at it.

Tooyoungtofeelthisold · 09/04/2023 21:59

Yep, my husband is the same.
I've recently said to him that I need to cut back on arranging things for him. My entire mental load is our family, and his entire mental load is his wants, which never include us.

This means that I will no longer be planning, and financing the family holidays that cost 8/9/10k, and all the associated paperwork and planning things to do, meals, booking it all and ensuring there's spending money, which means potentially no more family holidays...tbh this came about more for the fact that he couldn't find his driving licence about 4 days before we went on our last holiday and that was his only responsibility.

I'll just book shorter, cheaper things for me and the kids.

He gets the same effort as he puts in with gifts.

I've stopped planning date nights.

I will continue to give a lot less until I see a whole lot more from him.

pinksquash13 · 09/04/2023 22:10

I've got one who is so shit at life admin and organising. Sometimes I get fed up, especially when it's my birthday/ wedding anniversary; I know to expect nothing special. I am very keen on fairness and try to achieve it in other ways. I clean and oraganise life/food/kids. He is good at childcare, washing, dishwasher/clearing kitchen, sorting and tidying. Neither of us do DIY or gardening and I'd love him to step up in this area. I work PT and have equal access to money. I mostly don't feel resentful because I feel there is balance. I actually think I'd struggle to 'let go' if I had a super organised partner as I quite like doing it and don't think anyone can do it better than me (e.g. plan a holiday getting the best deals). I'm sure they could but I'd struggle to trust them.

WhereYouLeftIt · 09/04/2023 22:56

"I often wonder what his life would look like if i wasn't here. I asked him once and he said that he's plan things then but why do it when I was able to."
That's a truly gobsmacking answer. A paraphrasing of 'why have a dog and bark yourself'.

I think I'd have to give him a list of things that I was no longer going to do, because why should I when he is able to if he gets his finger out?

Yazo · 09/04/2023 23:06

Mine too although the occasional time I complain and he books it's not worth it, like how he's really happy to save 50p on a fixed train fair so we have to sit in a train station for hours instead of just getting which one comes. When we go on holiday it's always nice because I book nice places. He's started doing the online shop, I book the slots and then he changes the trolley the day before. I don't know why it annoys me less than it used to but I don't mind so much these days.

Guessitswednesday · 09/04/2023 23:17

We had a weekend away booked for our birthdays last year, he sat and did nothing. No packing, no offer to help and it caused a row. So i said i dont want to go. Hour passed and he said what are we doing then and i said, nothings sorted, im not killing myself getting everything ready to go, youve not helped and i already said, im not going. He tried to say he didnt know what needed doing but looked pretty sheepish when i pointed out wed been going on holiday 15years, he knew full well what needed doing. Gets on my tits though, even on the weekends, asks me what were doing....THINK OF SOMETHING YOUR FECKING SELF