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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Who's right and who's wrong out of me and my husband?

462 replies

SallyMcCarthy · 11/04/2024 15:14

I had major abdominal surgery 2 days ago (gall bladder removal, laparoscopic surgery), and I'm now recovering at home. Knowing I was going to be having the surgery, I booked my dog into Doggy Daycare for every day between now and 22 April. My dog, Fudge, absolutely adores going to daycare. It's a wonderful place and he loves romping around with the other dogs - it's his favourite thing to do. So, I thought: I'll book him in every day for four/five hours, so I'll be able to have a calm house to recover in, and he can be having fun at daycare. I assumed my husband would be willing to drive Fudge to and from the daycare facility. For context: my husband hates being 'stuck in the car'. He finds driving stressful, whereas I love it. Doggy Daycare is a 30 minute drive from our house. While I was in hospital, my husband messaged me and said, 'The traffic was really bad this morning when I was taking Fudge to daycare, so from tomorrow onwards, I'm not going to take him. I'll just look after him at home, it's fine -- I'll take him for walks two or three times a day.' Now, Fudge totally would be fine, but he'd also be a bit bored. His favourite fun is going to play with the other dogs. He has such a wonderful time. And I very much want to recover gently from my operation and ideally do some work too (I have a backlog waiting for me, once I have enough energy) and it would be so much harder for me if there were a bouncy bored dog in the house all day during this period. Another thing, for context, is that I am the sole breadwinner. I earn a lot of money, and my husband hasn't worked for about 15 years (he gave up his job to be at home with the kids because my job required constant travel in those days.)

So, I said to him, 'Listen, I really really want a quiet house so I can work, and for Fudge to go to daycare. Please, please will you drive him there and back while I recover? Just for maybe five days, and then I should be strong enough to drive him myself.' And my husband said no. He said he didn't mind having Fudge at home and would far rather that, and walk him several times, than take him to daycare with all the driving involved. And I just wanted Fudge to have the most fun possible, and for me to have the quiet time I craved too...so I ended up driving Fudge to and from daycare yesterday, the actual day after my abdominal surgery. And I drove him there again today, and will pick him up this afternoon - even though I feel tender and weak and barely recovered. Husband sees me doing this and still doesn't say, 'Look if it means that much to you, I'll drive him there and back.' Am I being unreasonable to think he should just have driven the dog to day care for the days I can't do it?

OP posts:
CatherineofAmazon · 11/04/2024 17:47
David Martinez Drinking GIF by Major League Soccer

Sounds like your pampered husband has sod all else to do all day so he should take the dog to daycare like he agreed to.
Honestly, reading this has really pissed me off. He’s a selfish git.

sorry about the gif, no idea how that got there😂

Mnetcurious · 11/04/2024 17:49

CurlewKate · 11/04/2024 16:52

"It really doesn't matter! His time doesn't belong to the OP to direct. He's not staff!"

I think it does matter. Obviously she shouldn't be directing him. But if it's something he can do to help her recovery, then surely he should do it? To be loving and supportive?

Being loving and supportive doesn’t mean being obliged to drive for an hour twice a day so that the doggy can play with his friends because the op wants her precious pet to “have fun”. Husband has said he will walk the dog and keep it out of the way so that op can recover, that’s what she actually needs.

Delphiniumandlupins · 11/04/2024 17:50

You were unreasonable (and probably unsafe) driving to Doggy Daycare - 30 minutes away must be 2 hours driving every day. When you have recovered a bit and feel able to do some work then you might need to revisit whether Fudge is preventing you working at home. Or if an active dog is slowing your recovery you can address his exercise with your DH. Just get well before you try driving again.

fieldsofbutterflies · 11/04/2024 17:52

I'm team DH, I'm afraid.

Your dog doesn't need to go to daycare if he has two adults at home for company - one of whom isn't working/recovering and is happy to take him for several walks a day.

No dog should be bored on three walks a day with unlimited company - if mine couldn't settle at home without hours of daycare, I'd be wondering where my training had gone so wrong, to be quite honest.

Fannyfiggs · 11/04/2024 17:53

I can't get my head round the #teamhusband here.

OP has had surgery. She would like her dog to go to daycare whilst she recovers. Her husband does not work. He agreed to do it. He should be doing it.

And all this pearl clutching about him being in the car for two hours. It's two hours, no two days 🙄

OP LTB

Mnetcurious · 11/04/2024 17:56

CatherineofAmazon · 11/04/2024 17:47

Sounds like your pampered husband has sod all else to do all day so he should take the dog to daycare like he agreed to.
Honestly, reading this has really pissed me off. He’s a selfish git.

sorry about the gif, no idea how that got there😂

Edited

Would you say the same the other way round?

Wife gave up working to look after kids so that husband could continue his career and earn big bucks. Children now grown up but wife hasn’t needed to go back to work.
Husband recovering from surgery demands that wife drives two hours per day so that dog can play with its friends, even though husband knows wife doesn’t like driving. Wife has said she’ll give the dog extra walks and keep it out of the way so that husband can recover. But apparently that’s not good enough and the wife should be doing unnecessary driving because that’s what the husband wants and she doesn’t work.

zurg123 · 11/04/2024 18:01

Team husband. Sounds like a big lot of fuss for no real reason. If I was recovering I'd want my dog near me as he has a calming influence. Has your dog not been trained?

DearAnt · 11/04/2024 18:02

Clearly this isn’t about your recovery, or you wouldn’t be driving. It’s about you wanting the dog to do the activities he prefers.

I get it. I over-meet my pets’ needs and feel awful if they’re not getting max enjoyment, all the time, but I do think a minimum 2 hour round trip per day is a bit nuts, particularly when the alternative is going for several walks.

shenandoahvalley · 11/04/2024 18:05

We are very well off as a result of my work

Your DH may well be a lazy sod, and leeching off you - in which case why stay with him?

If he's not a lazy sod leeching off you, why say this? It's not relevant to your question. You've only been able to earn what you earn because he was at home. You denigrate him with your every post.

In any event, it turns out you were asking the wrong question in your OP. What you really wanted to ask was "is my DH being unreasonable reneging on agreeing to do something twice a day for 5 days because the first time he did it he got stuck in traffic?". That would have garnered you very different, and probably more favourable replies.

fieldsofbutterflies · 11/04/2024 18:05

Fannyfiggs · 11/04/2024 17:53

I can't get my head round the #teamhusband here.

OP has had surgery. She would like her dog to go to daycare whilst she recovers. Her husband does not work. He agreed to do it. He should be doing it.

And all this pearl clutching about him being in the car for two hours. It's two hours, no two days 🙄

OP LTB

But there's no reason for him to go to daycare other than OP thinking he'd be bored at home. It's not an essential.

There's absolutely no way I'd be driving my dog around for two hours a day just because DH was having surgery and wanted him to "romp around with other dogs".

I do think he should never have agreed to it in the first place, though.

fieldsofbutterflies · 11/04/2024 18:07

Mnetcurious · 11/04/2024 17:56

Would you say the same the other way round?

Wife gave up working to look after kids so that husband could continue his career and earn big bucks. Children now grown up but wife hasn’t needed to go back to work.
Husband recovering from surgery demands that wife drives two hours per day so that dog can play with its friends, even though husband knows wife doesn’t like driving. Wife has said she’ll give the dog extra walks and keep it out of the way so that husband can recover. But apparently that’s not good enough and the wife should be doing unnecessary driving because that’s what the husband wants and she doesn’t work.

I was just about to type something similar.

No way would anyone think a stay at home mum should drive a dog around for two hours a day just so the husband could recover, especially if said SAHM was offering to walk the dog three times a day instead.

DysmalRadius · 11/04/2024 18:11

You said you wanted peace to recover and work, but when your husband offered to take the dog out instead, you drove for two hours to daycare and back hindering your recovery, presumably not working, and potentially putting other road users at risk.

You want your dog to have an extra good time at the expense of your husband not stressing. Your husband won't suck up driving for a few days to help you out post surgerry. You both sound pretty hard to live with tbh. Do you often do things for each other or is everything a struggle? And if you're rich, wouldn't a taxi have been an option?

bridgetreilly · 11/04/2024 18:14

Why didn’t you have this discussIon before booking? I think you made a lot of foolish assumptions about your dog being more important than your husband.

BusyMummy001 · 11/04/2024 18:24

If day care was a 10min drive, not much traffic, I’d be on your side. I have two young spaniels and am struggling to get on with my work just now so I totally understand why you feel he might be too much.

But I’ve done the 2hours+ a day in a car on school runs in the past and you die a little each time. It is totally dead time. Fudge is a dog. So long as DH takes him for a couple of long walks to wear him out each day, he’ll be happy. That will still take up 2hrs of your DH’s day when he can’t do what he wants/needs, but at least he isn’t stuck in a car, which he really hates.

TeaGinandFags · 11/04/2024 18:26

Op states that hubby agreed to take Fudge to daycare. Then changed his mind leaving her up a creek without a paddle.

Fudge shoukd still go to daycare but via taxi not with his mum.

OP should rethink here relationship. If she's keeping him in blover, thdn the least he could do is keep a promise.

PuddlesPityParty · 11/04/2024 18:27

CurlewKate · 11/04/2024 16:52

"It really doesn't matter! His time doesn't belong to the OP to direct. He's not staff!"

I think it does matter. Obviously she shouldn't be directing him. But if it's something he can do to help her recovery, then surely he should do it? To be loving and supportive?

He was - by looking after the dog. It’s just not in the way OP wants it to be.

BobbyBiscuits · 11/04/2024 18:27

@Rickrolypoly ok, well the way I see it is if I was not contributing financially and my partner asked me to care for the dog, but they wanted it to go to daycare, then it's in my interests to contribute towards said transport to daycare if I cannot provide that. I personally wouldn't want it to go there but if my partner was paying it's their choice. The 'pocket money' thing was a bit harsh and meant somewhat tongue in cheek though.

fieldsofbutterflies · 11/04/2024 18:27

TeaGinandFags · 11/04/2024 18:26

Op states that hubby agreed to take Fudge to daycare. Then changed his mind leaving her up a creek without a paddle.

Fudge shoukd still go to daycare but via taxi not with his mum.

OP should rethink here relationship. If she's keeping him in blover, thdn the least he could do is keep a promise.

How has he left her up a creek without a paddle, exactly? Confused

ringoffiire · 11/04/2024 18:28

It's a dog, not a child. It will be fine with your husband. It doesn't need to go to 'daycare'.

PuddlesPityParty · 11/04/2024 18:29

Doggy daycares are actually starting to get a lot of bad press so maybe he’s done little Fudge a favour

Februaryfeels · 11/04/2024 18:32

Playing with his friends

🤣🤣🤣

Floralnomad · 11/04/2024 18:34

YABU I wouldn’t sit in traffic potentially 4x a day for something that is unnecessary.

Popetthetreehugger · 11/04/2024 18:36

are you for real ? Fudge is a dog , your DH is a human who doesn’t like driving . So your dogs preference trumps your husbands ? Ands it’s your mind reading of the dog preference at that !

Rikitiki78 · 11/04/2024 18:37

This from a stay-at-home partner? Why can’t he just do his wife the favor that she asked? Sheez. Such selfishness.

beetr00 · 11/04/2024 18:38

Disappointing that he's reneged @SallyMcCarthy

Do not jeopardise your recovery, as you are financially secure, you certainly could hire someone else to transport your Fudge.

Get well soon 💐