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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to refuse to continue the 'wifework' for XP?

330 replies

Calipso32 · 22/10/2023 20:08

Long story story, my ex partner of a decade and I separated a month ago. We have two little DC and are still living together, as he refuses to entertain any situation where I can access my equity in our house. I expect to continue this cohabitation arrangement for the next 3-6 months so am trying to lay some ground rules to survive it.

I have always done the 'wifework' in our relationship. The meal prep, grocery shopping, cooking, laundry, life and kid admin, buying clothes for kids and organising their appointments and so on... We both work, him full time and me 80% as I take the children one day a week.

Since the separation I've told him:

  1. I will cook for the DC and I. He must sort his own meals out.
  1. I will do the DC and my own laundry. He must do his own.
  1. He's in out much bigger spare room. I've taken our old room. I've asked him to knock before entering and preferably to give me my space and not to enter at all. I asked him to take some of his clothes to the spare room as our wardrobe is in this room.

So far, he's ignored all my boundaries when it comes to privacy and comes into my room to dress every morning when I'm in bed. He's started doing his own laundry at least.

I'm a good cook and he's livid that I'm not cooking for him anymore. I'm still doing the shopping and told him to tell me what he wants me to buy so he can cook for himself. He's a rubbish cook and makes no effort to learn the basics. So far he's just taking meals I've already made from the freezer or any extra food on the counter from a meal I've just made for the DC. How is this fair?

I think he should learn to fend for himself. Especially as he's forced me into this co-habiting arrangement.

When this is pointed out to him he walks around swearing under his breath about my priorities being messed up and 'he can't even eat the food he pays for'.

I'm on maternity leave for another month with our youngest and he's up until now been supporting us whilst I'm on the unpaid part of my leave. Now he's saying I need to start paying my way (before I return) as a way to further control me.

He's a complete dickhead and I actually dispise him at this point for making this so much harder than I needs to be.

Are my ground rules reasonable?

OP posts:
Mumof3confused · 21/11/2023 19:58

Sounds so much like my ex. What did the mediator say?

Ofcourseshecan · 19/04/2024 22:15

VikingVolva · 22/10/2023 20:20

It cuts both ways - yes he should respect your boundaries

But as you are now separated, and are dividing households, you need to start paying your own way. Now, not in a month's time. Can you bring forward your return to work?

It’s his baby OP is devoting her time to!

Rocksonabeach · 19/04/2024 22:18

Torganer · 22/10/2023 20:11

put a lock on your door. Stop shopping for him.

This - eat all your meals. Don’t leave any left overs or put a fridge in your room and lock the door put a proper lock on it

CanadaNotAMum · 20/04/2024 16:26

VikingVolva · 22/10/2023 20:39

Not really. There's more to it than that and you know it. You want to withdraw from everything you have been doing in the household for him (ie the previous fair split of responsibility) but are not standing on your own two feet in terms of paying your way. It's called having your cake and eating it.

I agree with other posters about the need to get decisively into separate bedrooms. But I think reallocation of household chores waits until you are working again/

And the child will just look after itself for a month? Otherwise sorting out last minute, full time, short term childcare is likely to cost more than OP will make in the month. It makes no sense because it’s just not how life works. Her job right now, as it was before the split, is childcare.

itsalongwaybackfromsorry · 20/04/2024 17:55

Hopefully the mediator saw through him, he's gone and you're selling the house?

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