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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:
Spacehop · 14/03/2025 07:43

It's not just the DH that has a say, the OP does too. He doesn't get to dictate. It should be a negotiation. And £40k is not a hobby job. Especially as the OP is climbing the career ladder and may well earn more in future.

OP the same people that are saying defer to your husband now would also blame you further down the line if he left you and you were without a salary, career path or pension. Seriously we have to protect our own futures and he has to pick up the odd bit of childcare. If you want to compromise batch cook on busy weeks so you are just heating up food and can help with the kids from 5.30 but don't compromise your career.

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 07:47

Why don't you quit your Job and work in your husband's business for now.

Because she enjoys her job!

Once the kids are older you can go back to pursuing your dream job but for now it just isn't worth the stress.

It's not always that easy. Some sectors aren't very forgiving of a lengthy career break.

Working full time with children is very difficult and having a job with the demands of travelling away is crazy on the salary you are earning.

Yet lots of people manage to do it 🤷🏼‍♀️
Her life would be less stressful if her husband stopped making her feel guilty for just doing her job and for 'only' earning £40k.
Only in MN world is that salary considered unreasonable.
Meanwhile in the real world being asked to do a relatively small amount of travel for that salary is not an outrageous request.

arethereanyleftatall · 14/03/2025 07:55

@DBD1975you are viewing it only from a practical point of view, and as if the dh views the op as his equal, and thus has the capacity to have a respectful discussion about how to solve this to keep them both happy. Of course there are very easy ways to solve this given the family income. The point is the husband doesn’t care, he doesn’t care about the ops happiness, just about what she can do to keep his life easiest. That is what the op needs to protect herself for by keeping her job, not what he does, but his character. Working for him would be an absolutely terrible idea given that he already views her as his staff.

dottiedodah · 14/03/2025 08:19

I can't believe posters saying buy in help or they see his point .which is what exactly. My friends dh took paid hols to care for their dc while she went to US for a holiday to see her cousin ffs! Managed fine .simply not on board with equality

Unpopularopi · 14/03/2025 08:50

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lechatnoir · 14/03/2025 08:50

I'm also staggered how many women a suggesting her little job earning a mere £40k (in my dreams!) can't possibly be as stressful as her DH's because of her salary. How on earth can you possibly know this about her job based purely on salary. And this is of course exactly what her DH thinks. Plus suggestions she gives up a career she loves and wants to continue to support her DH and family.

lechatnoir · 14/03/2025 08:59

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well don't you sound a catch 😂.

"I don't let her...." "no way would I tolerate..." You do realise this is your wife not your child you're talking about?

Mirabai · 14/03/2025 09:01

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Yeah you don’t actually have a wife though and probably never will.

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 09:03

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Hahaha

Go on, tell us, what does happen on business trips 😂😂 perhaps I'm doing them wrong?

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 09:05

honestly only weak men tolerate their wife spending more hours with other men than them

Look Andrew Tate has arrived 🙌

Unpopularopi · 14/03/2025 09:06

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NaomhPadraigin · 14/03/2025 09:09

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That was a man though.

My husband always has sex with another man on business trips, it's just what happens isn't it?
Surely you do too @unpopularopi?

(In unpop's World!)

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 09:09

@Unpopularopi so one MN thread is representative of all women on business trips?

Funnily enough, I manage to not cheat on my husband whether I'm at home or on a works trip.

It will probably blow your mind to know that I work in a fairly male dominated profession and my husband works with mainly women.
It's no big deal 🤷🏼‍♀️

Donttellempike · 14/03/2025 09:12

ThejoyofNC · 13/03/2025 12:10

I'm with your DH on this. Your salary is too low to be doing all that. You're expecting him to be the higher earner whilst also doing nearly all the childcare. I'd leave your current job and find employment elsewhere.

Are you the husband? Absolute nonsense obviously

Ohnobackagain · 14/03/2025 09:32

@hesnotthewindbeneathmywings he sounds jealous, if I’m honest, and your name is brilliant. I’d be maybe working out who does what - what you have said suggests you both pull your weight but be interesting to have it written down in black and white (see if there ARE deficiencies). Don’t change job unless YOU want to - his complaints don’t seem realistic to me.

arethereanyleftatall · 14/03/2025 09:35

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Yours isn’t just an unpopular opinion, coercive control is a crime.

Unpopularopi · 14/03/2025 09:44

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NaomhPadraigin · 14/03/2025 09:49

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Fucking hell 😳

I think you need to come out of your cave @unpopularopi, and you're the one who needs to join the real world.

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 09:50

So you're advocating stoning women to death @Unpopularopi ?

Yeah, you sound unhinged. Go back to X and the other incels. You'll get no traction here.

NaomhPadraigin · 14/03/2025 09:51

I can only assume that @unpopularopi Is taking the piss, and enjoying "his" riling of MN on a Friday morning.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 14/03/2025 09:52

Just going to ignore Andrew Tate up there who’s seemingly joined us…

Your H is incredibly unreasonable.

Your job isn’t “low paid” - and I hope when he thinks of his earnings he’s talking about the amount he pays tax on not his takings…

What about wrap around care if the children are so young that it’s “chaos” after school? No one should be wfh in “chaos”. If you’re getting in at 5.30 that’s well within after school club hours - not saying you should do the pick up but he could be doing that whilst you get the food on having had another couple of hours to work.

ConnieSlow · 14/03/2025 10:19

So he wants you to act like you are self employed yet not understanding that you work for someone! He isn't supportive at all

waterrat · 14/03/2025 10:26

He sounds like a patronising bully

SouthLondonMum22 · 14/03/2025 11:16

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 14/03/2025 07:39

To be fair, I think I would feel differently if both of us would be travelling internationally for work for a week+ at a time. It would feel more equal to me.

I think it can become an issue when it is only one person who ends up going solo with the kids for a week at a time that it can become an issue. Especially if going into it, the one with the kids was already not keen on the idea.

I can see why people would become resentful if their partner just swans off on a trip with no thought of the impact it will have on the person at home.

We've always been quite mindful of doing what we can to make it easier for the parent at home. For example, DH has arranged for his parents to have DS for a couple of nights while he's away and has arranged for our friends to do the school pick up on the days that he usually does it so it's not too disruptive to my working week.
I have been annoyed if he'd just gone and left all the arrangements to me!

I think that sounds like a good and fair setup. It seems to work really well for you and DH too.

DBD1975 · 14/03/2025 17:09

arethereanyleftatall · 14/03/2025 07:55

@DBD1975you are viewing it only from a practical point of view, and as if the dh views the op as his equal, and thus has the capacity to have a respectful discussion about how to solve this to keep them both happy. Of course there are very easy ways to solve this given the family income. The point is the husband doesn’t care, he doesn’t care about the ops happiness, just about what she can do to keep his life easiest. That is what the op needs to protect herself for by keeping her job, not what he does, but his character. Working for him would be an absolutely terrible idea given that he already views her as his staff.

How do you know what he cares about, we only have one side of the story.

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