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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not give up my job that DH hates?

315 replies

hesnotthewindbeneathmywings · 13/03/2025 11:03

First off I will say that DH does an incredible amount at home and for our family compared to many husbands. He runs his own business which allows him the flexibility to wfh most of the time so usually does the school pick ups for our youngest 4 days a week, and our oldest 3 days. We both do morning drop offs every day and I do pick ups on the days he doesn't. I have less flexibility with pick ups because I'm often on calls which is why he does most of them.

Unlike DH I work for a company. My role over the past few years required me to be the office 1 day a week (30 min commute), and occasionally be in London / elsewhere a day or two a handful of times a month. Once a quarter I would be required to travel to another office for 2 days (including overnight). DH was very disgruntled with my working arrangement and felt I wasn't around enough to support with the children.

DH works very hard and his business provides for our family very well. About triple what I bring in. Salary and progression have been a real struggle for me in my career, partly because of previously undiagnosed ADHD and very low self esteem. I'm now diagnosed and on medication. It's been life changing for me and I've excelled at work performance wise, but progression has been slow (but it is happening). Still, my salary is fairly low (roughly £40k). DH feels my salary doesn't contribute enough to our household income given my workload & travel requirements (see below). For reference I have benchmarked my role and the pay is in the range of most others I've found. Albeit at the lower end of the range. But it's not uncommon.

I've been trying very hard over the past year to progress in my role and move to a senior position. I've managed a small pay rise, and the responsibilities in my role have changed slightly over the past 6 months. I wfh 3 days a week, travel overnight to our other office 2-3 quarters rather than 4 like I'd done previously. There are less ad-hoc days I'm required to be in London meeting agencies and clients. But there are several times I year I'm required to travel for work. However this is not often, and usually not for long. So far it's just been once about 6 months ago for 3 days.

I've been incredibly anxious to tell him that I'm now required to travel abroad and be away from home for a week. This overlaps with a weekend due to flights, schedules and time zones. Not only is attendance mandatory and a critical element of my role, but I see it as an important step towards progressing in my career.

DH completely flipped out when I told him. He can't understand 'how my company expects me to leave my family for a week'. I've tried to explain to him that I am the only person with my role in the company and attending the meetings and events on this trip is a mandatory and crucial element to my role. If I said I couldn't go and had to have someone else go in my place, I'd be handing over a defining element of my job and I feel it would put me at a significant disadvantage for future career growth.

I've tried to explain that a lot of others in my team (same level as myself) are all required to come into the office 2 days a week, travel to our other office a few times a year, and occasionally travel abroad. Often more frequent than myself, but usually just for a couple nights. Many don't have families, but some do (including several mothers).

All DH does is criticise I don't support enough at home and don't earn enough. I love my job, and perform very well in it. He doesn't really understand the dynamics, politics and strains of the corporate world because he's never worked a corporate job. He can't understand that I just can't cancel a call at the drop of a hat to collect one of the children if he's in the middle of something.

AIBU in sticking with my role and my vision to progress on a career path I enjoy? It's taken me 20 years of various corporate jobs to finally find one I'm good at and that I enjoy.

OP posts:
TheAmusedQuail · 13/03/2025 11:13

Imagine if the roles were switched and you were the man and he was the woman.

He would expect you to support him in his lower paying corporate job. You'd be expected to continue in your childcare role and to just pick up, without complaint, when he went off to do the overseas trip/over nights.

The reason he's digging his heels in is NOT because he earns more than you, it's because you're the woman and he believes you should take on the majority of the responsibility for the children. He's resentful that he's been pushed into what he sees as a woman's role in the family.

Imagine if you two end up divorced. Presumably he'd want 50/50 contact so he doesn't have to pay you CS. He'd HAVE to do what he's doing now. From your perspective, you need to hang on to your job in case of divorce. Do not let him make you financial reliant on him.

TreesWelliesKnees · 13/03/2025 11:14

Unless there's a mega backstory that involves you reneging on a prior agreement to sacrifice your career for the family and his 'big job', I think your DH is being very unreasonable. Keep working and protect yourself as frankly he doesn't sound like he respects you or your contribution.

Can you buy in a bit of help for the week you are away? Someone to cook the evening meal, do the laundry etc? (From joint expenses, obviously, not your personal money!).

YesThatsATurdOnTheRug · 13/03/2025 11:19

I can see why he'd feel how he does, but he should really still support you, while also being allowed to moan that he's carrying a higher load at home. I complain when my dh has to travel for work even though I'm a stay at home mum, doesn't mean I think he shouldn't or even that it's his choice/fault, I just don't like being left with it all and so I moan about it! 😬 not really fair of me.

He's being very unreasonable to ask you to quit and unreasonable to make you feel bad.

Couldyounot · 13/03/2025 11:26

He needs to understand that not all that many of us have the luxury of working when it suits them - I do nowadays, but that's after around 25 years of horrible hours and often lengthy commutes which got me the skill set that my current job needs

hesnotthewindbeneathmywings · 13/03/2025 11:30

TreesWelliesKnees · 13/03/2025 11:14

Unless there's a mega backstory that involves you reneging on a prior agreement to sacrifice your career for the family and his 'big job', I think your DH is being very unreasonable. Keep working and protect yourself as frankly he doesn't sound like he respects you or your contribution.

Can you buy in a bit of help for the week you are away? Someone to cook the evening meal, do the laundry etc? (From joint expenses, obviously, not your personal money!).

He does the breakfasts (cereal) and I do 95% of the evening meals.

Despite me cooking most of the evening meals, he then twists it around and gets angry with me because he feels that days I'm working in the office or in London he has to deal with the stress of his own work and the children until I get home at 5:30 where I avoid the chaos at home and 'swoop in and only have to do a bit of cooking'. Confused

OP posts:
blueshoes · 13/03/2025 11:37

Does he want you to be a SAHM or find another job?

Unrelated38 · 13/03/2025 11:39

Tbh I can see his point. He does most of the childcare and earns most of the money. And I do see his point about cooking. When I've been managing the kids all day I'd rather go cook by myself than stay with the kids.

Honestly I can really see his point. But I don't see a solution. You giving up your job isn't really fair. Can you pay for more help? If he earns 3 times what you do then you've got like 150k a year coming in. That's alot of money in my books. We support our family just fine on your income alone. You should be able to afford some help.

hesnotthewindbeneathmywings · 13/03/2025 11:42

YesThatsATurdOnTheRug · 13/03/2025 11:19

I can see why he'd feel how he does, but he should really still support you, while also being allowed to moan that he's carrying a higher load at home. I complain when my dh has to travel for work even though I'm a stay at home mum, doesn't mean I think he shouldn't or even that it's his choice/fault, I just don't like being left with it all and so I moan about it! 😬 not really fair of me.

He's being very unreasonable to ask you to quit and unreasonable to make you feel bad.

He's not asked me to quit exactly. But he's expecting me to do my job on my terms. Declining to take on crucial parts of my role because he sees them as an inconvenience.

There's a couple things we need doing around the house today. I mentioned to him yesterday that I had a very important call today with 15+ senior and external people to run through a project I'm working on, so couldn't help between X time and X time due to back to back calls.

I let him know this morning that the important call had to been moved, and he got angry asking why it was moved, and why they could move it but I couldn't. He cannot understand the politics and seniority that dictates who can and can't move calls, the complexities of juggling so many schedules etc. He feels that I should just be able to decline attending calls and travelling because it doesn't suit me (aka him!)

OP posts:
Seeingalight · 13/03/2025 11:42

hesnotthewindbeneathmywings · 13/03/2025 11:30

He does the breakfasts (cereal) and I do 95% of the evening meals.

Despite me cooking most of the evening meals, he then twists it around and gets angry with me because he feels that days I'm working in the office or in London he has to deal with the stress of his own work and the children until I get home at 5:30 where I avoid the chaos at home and 'swoop in and only have to do a bit of cooking'. Confused

So he expects you to do all the childcare? Why shouldn't he do it as well?

Can you get wraparound care, not just for the days he's meant to do it but for both of you?

To answer your op I do think he's being unreasonable. Surely he knows not all jobs earn what he's earning so I think that's an excuse to say you're not contributing enoug

When he says you're not home enough to support the family he means him.

It's not like you're even away that much!

He wants you home looking after the kids so he doesn't have to, so he can do what he wants with building his business. That's the actual truth of it.

But he happens to have an ambitious, talented wife who's not doting on him.

Seeingalight · 13/03/2025 11:45

He cannot understand

Yes he can, he blames it on you because in his eyes you're putting yourself in that position.

I've been self employed for many years and never worked in a corporate position but It's not hard to understand a chain of command!

friendlycat · 13/03/2025 11:46

He sounds utterly exhausting and unbelievably rigid. Whether he’s had experience of a corporate role or not. Your salary contributes towards your household and your pension.

I really don’t know how you are going to get him on board with all of this as he sounds very entrenched in his views of how your job should work.

Thisshirtisonfire · 13/03/2025 11:46

He's being deeply unreasonable.
And he doesn't do the majority of stuff at home does he? You split it. Why has he conned you into thinking this is the case? You do 95% of the cooking.. you share pickups.. he's literally not doing that much more than you and he's able to because of the timings of his job.
Me and my DH do what we can according to the timings our jobs allow. It's not always fair. For example I work 12 hour weekend night shifts so I am asleep on at least one day of the weekend every weekend. So he will have all 3 kids alone to care for.
He works weekdays so the kids are at school and I only have the preschooler to care for during school hours. So despite being the higher earner by far he is doing more childcare than me to facilitate my job.
He has never once questioned it because it's not my fault, this is how my job is and that's how his job is and so that's how we have to arrange things.
A few years ago I supported him through a masters degree by being a SAHM and doing all of the childcare.
There will be different times in your marriage where you support each other. Right now your DH needs to do his bit so you can progress in your career.

It's not like your DH is doing absolutely everything single handedly. He needs to get a grip. Both of your jobs are important. You go away rarely and it's not something you can get out of. He's being very unreasonable.

Crushed23 · 13/03/2025 11:52

He sounds bitter and controlling. Stop worrying about what he thinks and get on with progressing your career. If you get divorced in the future you will no longer have access to his high earnings, so you need to build the foundations of standing on your own two feet.

WaterMonkey · 13/03/2025 11:54

If he wanted a SAHM he should have made that clear to you before you had children together. The thing he’s complaining about is just his share of what you embarked on together. Like someone else said, if he really can’t hold up his end of things he should use some of his significantly higher income to pay for help.

Honestly, we can’t win. We go to work and we’re accused of neglect, we stay at home and we’re sponging off some poor fella’s hard earned. It’s so tiresome.

katmarie · 13/03/2025 11:56

You need to reframe your perspective of his position. You say 'he cannot understand...' I assume his job is reasonably challenging and deals with clients/timescales/other people's expectations, given your description of his salary? In which case, he absolutely can understand. He's just not prepared to accept it from you. Where you go from there I'm not sure, but definitely don't give up your job.

Crushed23 · 13/03/2025 11:56

I let him know this morning that the important call had to been moved, and he got angry asking why it was moved, and why they could move it but I couldn't. He cannot understand the politics and seniority that dictates who can and can't move calls, the complexities of juggling so many schedules etc. He feels that I should just be able to decline attending calls and travelling because it doesn't suit me (aka him!)

Not only is he unreasonable but he sounds like a fucking idiot from this? How stupid do you have to be to not understand the basics of work etiquette.

AndSoFinally · 13/03/2025 11:57

I can see why he's annoyed. In his eyes he does most of the work at home and earns most of the money and your job is interfering with the smooth running of the home, and is increasing his workload, while not really contributing a lot to the joint pot

I know you say you do 95% of the evening meals, but if he is having to juggle the kids, homework, finishing his own work, bath, bedtime, etc, while you stand in the kitchen in peace, again it's not really "helpful" as such. Let's face it, I'd rather be the cook in that situation. Have you offered to swap?

I think in terms of keeping your job, buying in help to cover the shortfall is probably key

hesnotthewindbeneathmywings · 13/03/2025 11:58

blueshoes · 13/03/2025 11:37

Does he want you to be a SAHM or find another job?

I've asked him what his ideal solution would be and he's never been able to provide me with an answer.

He just wants me to either make more money, push back on crucial elements of my current job, or get a new job paying more and that is more convenient for him and our family.

It's not possible to only perform half my role and do the bits that suit my home life the best. Thats just an unrealistic option. So the only option would then be to quit my job and look for another.

But it's not a reasonable expectation from him that I would be able to go out and get another job with a significant salary increase that enables me to WFH every day, collect the children and be with them during my working hours.

OP posts:
BrollyGood · 13/03/2025 11:58

I think it depends on what he has explicitly stated he is willing to do - would he facilitate you being a SAHM?

It's very understandable that if he's bringing in enough money for the family and he needs to keep doing that to keep things afloat, he would feel that he shouldn't have to pick up childcare slack for his partner's 'feeling fulfilled' job.

If, on the other hand, he accepts your job is financially necessary then he doesn't get to dictate.

rumred · 13/03/2025 11:59

He's a misogynist. Hth.

BrollyGood · 13/03/2025 11:59

Just seen your update. Tough titty to him. He can't provide so you need a job. He needs to grow up.

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 13/03/2025 12:00

He can't understand 'how my company expects me to leave my family for a week'.

Is he a bit thick? Or just a plain old misogynist?

WhatNoRaisins · 13/03/2025 12:02

On a practical level would he be open to paying for a cleaner when you're away to take some of the load off?

ChateauMargaux · 13/03/2025 12:02

DH... I know you don't understand it... but I am a woman, who is already at a disadvantage simply by being female, I have had two pregnancies and 2 lots of maternity leave, which have a life long impact on my career. I feel that we are equal humans and have equal rights to self fulfillment outside of our family as well as contributing, within our means, to our family life. Please do not put your foot down and demand that I compromise my career so that I can take over things at home. If you genuinely believe that you can not continue to support our family by looking after our children after school and for the very few number of days that I have to travel away with work? Then let's solve this together.. why don't you consider dropping your hours a little, you would still earn very well if you reduced your hours to 80% or even 60%.. or we could look at an after school nanny or home help which would not cost £40k per year and not have the same impact on my lifeling earning, future pension and most of all my sense of self worth. We can do this together, as a team, where everyone's needs are met, not just yours. While it might ideal that each person's work be valued equally, that is simply not the world we live in.

Maray1967 · 13/03/2025 12:03

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 13/03/2025 12:00

He can't understand 'how my company expects me to leave my family for a week'.

Is he a bit thick? Or just a plain old misogynist?

This! Is he so thick that he doesn’t know that plenty of men have to work away at times?

If he knows that, then his issue is that the woman should not ever work away. Bollocks to that. I took students on weeklong field trips for years in a row. Part of the job - and DH stepped up. When DC were in nursery I booked the extra days. When in school I booked in extra afterschool club. But he picked them up at 5 and got on with it.