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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband afraid of DIY

337 replies

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:42

My Dad is a builder and my ex was too, so I've been around men who are handy all my life. I'm not very handy myself because I lack confidence, but I understand enough of the landscape to know when we need to get a trade in, or when we can do it ourselves.

My husband is a polymath, one of the most intelligent people I know, can learn and do anything he puts his mind to, but has always rented properties before we met and so had a landlord maintaining things for him.

I am the main earner in the house and work more than full time, he works between 2.5 and 4 days a week. I take responsibility for the house and garden, and my son from a previous marriage, and all the animals. He cooks twice a week and does the laundry. We have a cleaner.

All this is context for a real bone of contention between us at the moment. He won't get involved in home maintenance. On any level.

We had a leak in the upstairs bathroom recently that took the power out in the room beneath it. Once the leak had been sorted by a plumber and the room below had been dried out with a dehumidifier, I asked him to find an electrician to come and get the power back online. This was during a period when I was making redundancies at work, it was hideous and very stressful. My husband just didn't. I kept asking and he kept saying the room needs to dry, and I was like, it is dry. I've had the dehumidifier on, you can feel it's dry, it needs looking at. Weeks went by and I ended up sorting it myself.

Our washing machine stank and was full of mould. I asked him to empty the filter and clean it out when he had a minute, he said it wasn't that, there's something wrong with the pipes, we need to get a man in. I said we can't a man in until we've gone through basic maintenance. He lost his temper and said that his mum 'never once cleaned her washing machine filter', that's not a thing, it's not for homeowners to do. I pointed out that we're meant to do it every 2 months. He said that just isn't true. I cleared the filter myself, got all the mould out, nothing smells now.

Our dishwasher recently started not cleaning things properly. I googled and it said to clean the filter and spray arm as first action. I asked him to do that. He said he has no idea how, he's not a dishwasher repairman. I said that Google is his friend. He said he doesn't know the model. I said it's on the sticker. Long story short, it stopped draining completely because he did nothing. I googled for a plan of attack; he was adamant we needed a repairman. The outlet hose just needed clearing. I did it. These solutions are easy to find online.

And now we having the bathroom and windows replaced. I am fine that I have had to co-ordinate it all, line up all the trades, whatever. I AM better placed to do that. I do know more than him. Fine. But the builder is in today and I have a busy day on and we need some materials that I'd told the builder we already had, but we don't. So I just asked my husband if he'd go to the builder's yard to get some blocks and he had another meltdown. He hates going there, hates the feeling that they know more than he does...

I don't mind at all that he can't build a house himself. But he can teach himself anything when he wants to, and has said many times he finds DIY boring and it's not something he's interested in doing.

Me either. I had zero interest in how dishwashers work, washing machine filters, electricians... None. I don't figure out how things work because it's my life passion, nor do I go into technical detail. I just look online for 2-minute YouTube explainers and if it's simple, do it, and if it's hard, ring someone. Like a normal fucking adult.

It's really starting to make me cross. I'm not his landlord or his mother, and every damn thing in this house is my responsibility. Fine. But I can't even delegate simple things, and his reaction to requests is strange and OTT. He panics and gets defensive and then turns it around on me: normal people get repairmen in. Not to clean the bastard dishwasher filter they don't. If he's worried about being emasculated and embarrassed by people that know more than him, THAT would be more embarrassing. Getting the Hotpoint man out to empty sweetcorn.

He thinks I'm being really unreasonable and says there are other things he's suited to doing. But I'm at a loss to figure out what, because it isn't gardening, decorating, sorting cupboards out that need sorting, helping his stepson...

This is making me mad.

OP posts:
CanOfMangoTango · 16/07/2025 10:24

MyCyanReader · 16/07/2025 10:16

He clearly hates DIY and maintenance tasks so why are you continuing to force them on him?

If it's his lack of working hours and money he is bringing in, then ask him to do more hours.

You're meant to work as a team - strengths and weaknesses.

If it's not working as a couple then go your separate ways.

Nobody enjoys those jobs!

Who likes burrowing down into the dishwasher scraping the filter clean & scrubbing detritus? No one does.

He's not special, he needs to chip in like a normal person.

reversegear · 16/07/2025 10:24

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:54

Yeah, that's fair enough. Except he doesn't want any of the other chores off my plate either. I'm better with the animals, he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

It fair drives me mad.

He sounds like a mysogistic prick. Does he use his “intelligence “ for anything useful?

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:26

IfNot · 16/07/2025 10:14

I don’t even think DIY/ maintenance is the issue. He’s not interested in being a decent step father to your son. That’s going to fuck the kid up. Your son also sees a mum doing everything ( why does he only cook twice a week??) and a man doing bugger all. Great role model there.
I would admit my mistake and divorce him ( and I genuinely mean that because I’ve had my fill of substandard lazy men) but it’s up to you.

I have misrepresented that. He is very interested in being a stepdad, though I do think he's a questionable role model at times.

And I do think it's difficult to walk into a ready made family unit and take over.

When I say I do everything for my son, I mean, I'm the one who helps with college coursework, helped him apply for part-time jobs, help him with his work rota, buy him new clothes, help him budget... But I'm the person he comes to for that, because it was just the two of us for so long. I'm the default parent, and I don't mind, and I understand why - it's not a problem.

Except when I can't offload some other things.

My son cooks one night a week. We go out or get a takeway one night. The other three, I either cook or we have something easy - my husband will put some pizzas in the oven, type of thing.

OP posts:
Venalopolos · 16/07/2025 10:28

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:54

Yeah, that's fair enough. Except he doesn't want any of the other chores off my plate either. I'm better with the animals, he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

It fair drives me mad.

His attitude to men and women would be enough for me to LTB.

I am a woman, I do not see the mess and cleaning requirements that my DH does. I have some sympathy for men that get called every name under the sun for not taking on the mental load (although I take on the entire admin load by choice) because I genuinely don’t notice some things as quickly as my husband does in terms of cleaning etc.

But it’s not evolutionary. I’m a woman. I’d be shit at hunting berries, and I’m in a senior executive role at work and very good at seeing the bigger picture. Different people have different skills. I am also terrible at DIY, but very capable of being delegated to and following instructions. My DH is a man, and he’d be a great berry hunter, if that’s the measure we’re using.

So on so many different levels you DH is BVVVU, said from someone who usually has sympathy and understanding for the men usually described on here as lying when they say they just don’t see what needs to be done.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:31

Venalopolos · 16/07/2025 10:28

His attitude to men and women would be enough for me to LTB.

I am a woman, I do not see the mess and cleaning requirements that my DH does. I have some sympathy for men that get called every name under the sun for not taking on the mental load (although I take on the entire admin load by choice) because I genuinely don’t notice some things as quickly as my husband does in terms of cleaning etc.

But it’s not evolutionary. I’m a woman. I’d be shit at hunting berries, and I’m in a senior executive role at work and very good at seeing the bigger picture. Different people have different skills. I am also terrible at DIY, but very capable of being delegated to and following instructions. My DH is a man, and he’d be a great berry hunter, if that’s the measure we’re using.

So on so many different levels you DH is BVVVU, said from someone who usually has sympathy and understanding for the men usually described on here as lying when they say they just don’t see what needs to be done.

Yes! I need you to know that I'd be a shit berry hunter too. My whole job is about seeing the bigger picture, and at work I am a great starter and initiator of projects, but a crap finisher and terrible at attention to detail. That's fine though as my projects get passed down the line to people that are way better at implementation and execution than me.

I still manage to notice cat sick. What with treading in it, and that.

OP posts:
Daleksatemyshed · 16/07/2025 10:34

You earn more, work more, do all the gardening, planning _ what exactly does he bring to your marriage Op. If he works 2.5 to 4 days he should be doing way more at home or working longer hours to make more money. Just because he's clever isn't an excuse for laziness or to expect you to do everything.

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 10:38

He's shite OP, stop overthinking it. If you have any self-respect at all, just bin him off.

330ml · 16/07/2025 10:39

I’m not convinced berry picking ability is a good metric.

My husband is great at picking berries. I have seen him pick wheelbarrows full.

He then turned them all into beer.

CasperGutman · 16/07/2025 10:46

I think the use of the term "DIY" in the OP is a bit of a red herring. The whole concept of "Do-it-yourself" implies that people are actively choosing to do tasks themselves which most people would pay tradespersons to do for them. But the specific tasks mentioned in the OP include routine maintenance, involving nothing more than following the instructions provided with consumer electrical appliances.

The fact he's always lived in rented places is no excuse. If I were a landlord I'd expect a tenant to do tasks like this. They fall squarely in the category of tasks which the courts say tenants should be expected to carry out for themselves (apologies for the dated gendered language, but this is a judge writing in the 1950s): "The tenant must take proper care of the place. ... He must mend the electric light when it fuses. He must unstop the sink when it is blocked by his waste. In short, he must do the little jobs about the place which a reasonable tenant would do" Warren v Keen [1953] EWCA Civ 1.

Most tellingly, one of the bones of contention in the OP is that, far from being overly keen to call someone in to get a job done, the OP's other half procrastinated for weeks over calling an electrician.

Ultimately it seems like he feels inadequate due to his lack of knowledge of these matters. He's obviously competent in his own field, but he's gained knowledge of that area through years of study and experience and doesn't know where to start in other areas.

He's scared of feeling inferior in front of others (other men in particular?) - electricians, the guys at the builders' merchants. I think many of us will have experienced these feelings to some extent, but adults have to get over themselves and deal with it.

OP: your man gets away with this learned helplessness by letting you carry the load instead. I wonder how long you'll be around to do this for him?

Warren v Keen [1953] EWCA Civ 1 (09 October 1953)

https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1953/1.html

Catsandcannedbeans · 16/07/2025 10:52

My DH wasn’t great at DIY when we met, but I made it clear he needs to learn because we did not have the funds to be calling people out. My dad actually taught him a lot of DIY stuff and car related stuff and they bonded over it. It was actually very sweet and nice for my dad because he loves being in the know and teaching people. Would your husband be open to something like that? My dad has also tried to teach me stuff, I can do car stuff and some DIY, but I’ve never taken to it if I’m honest so I need my DH to do it.

At the end of the day you earn more and work more, he is capable of learning, so he needs to either learn or pick up some of your responsibilities.

BountifulPantry · 16/07/2025 11:16

If he won’t do the DIY that’s fine, BUT he needs to do another regular chore eg cleaning, washing the car, mowing the lawn, laundry, food shop etc.

In fact your relationship sounds pretty unbalanced but it’s playing out via the dishwasher!

Notmyrealname22 · 16/07/2025 11:17

Your DH is a bit…. Useless isn’t he?

He doesn’t work full time. He doesn’t do much around the house. He doesn’t do basic home maintenance, so wants to call in trades to do it but then also refuses to call in the trades.

What is his positive contribution to your life and that of your DS?

if the dishwasher is blocked and he refuses to unblock it, can you not just say to him that he needs to sort it then? And if he doesn’t sort it, then he needs to handwash the dishes until he does sort it.

I don’t think it’s a capability problem. It’s an ego problem. “I’m much too smart to waste my time on menial tasks like unblocking the dishwasher”. Never mind the fact that this attitude leaves you being the one who has to waste time on it on top of working full time, being the default parent and the household manager.

this line yells at you that this is an ego problem:
he hates the feeling that they know more than he does...
Of course they fucking do, that’s their job! That’s what they do 40 hours/week. They literally get paid to know more than him about this stuff. What sort of an ego does he have that he thinks they wouldn’t or shouldn’t know more than him when that’s their job?

i think you need to get some fair play cards and try to divide life up a bit more evenly. Best of luck.

Eyesopenwideawake · 16/07/2025 11:20

Do you want to stay in the relationship? You don't seem to like or respect him very much - what's the attraction?

theunbreakablecleopatrajones · 16/07/2025 11:24

I hate DIY so I was expecting to think you were being unreasonable - but really these things are just chores and maintenance not DIY - it’s not putting up a shelf.

I’d be annoyed with him too - but people have preferences, so the best thing overall would be to re divvy up your tasks to he does more with the garden/animals/house and you take over this stuff.

Not going to the yard to get bricks is dickish though - that isn’t even maintenance, it’s just shopping - so I would also sit down and have a conversation with him about the fact you are feeling very unsupported, which is a threat to your relationship so you need to talk through it and figure out how to change that

If he won’t engage, you have a bigger problem

also - why does he work PT? Does that really work for you? If it does then I think cooking twice a week and doing the laundry isn’t likely to represent a fair division of labour - why isn’t he doing the majority of domestic work?

DuskyPink1984 · 16/07/2025 11:24

There is no such thing as a perfect person, your DH is simply good at other things. If we were all good at everything maybe David Beckham would have been Prime Minister.

Cynic17 · 16/07/2025 11:28

Well, DIY isn't compulsory and there are some people who are clumsy and bad at practical tasks (I'm one of them!). So I don't know why there is this assumption that it's always the husband that has to do it. He'd probably make a hash of it anyway, so just keep things simple and pay for any plumber, electrician or handyman you need.

PollyBell · 16/07/2025 11:34

You lack confidence in it but he has to be able too? I presume there is things you cant do that he does and the reverse?

myplace · 16/07/2025 11:34

I just don’t understand what he’s contributing to the household?

You appear to do more hours at work, earn more money, do more chores…

What is he doing while you are doing chores or at work?

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:36

Eyesopenwideawake · 16/07/2025 11:20

Do you want to stay in the relationship? You don't seem to like or respect him very much - what's the attraction?

I like him plenty in lots of other ways, but I don't have much respect for him and that does worry me. Too often, I feel like he's a dependent, not a partner. A lodger, not someone with skin in the game. We own the house jointly, but all the money put into the deposit and the ongoing mortgage payments are made by me, I look after the fucking thing... It's fine, I can do it. But I am losing respect for him continually prioritising himself and his needs above basic responsibilities.

The disparities between our incomes doesn't help in terms of me respecting him but I am fairly good at separating this out. It's certainly not something I hold against him, throw in his face, or expect more from him. It is what it is.

But resentment is starting to creep in, in the disparities between our lives. He has no responsibility. He has a very casual attitude towards his job - works hard when he needs to, choose not to work otherwise. I used to admire that about him - his ability to balance things and separate work from life. Now I am starting to resent it, how precious he is about protecting his time for his hobbies and relaxing, when we're at an age and lifestage where life is busy, pensions are worrying... His life feels completely disconnected from my reality, divorced from it and the house and what it takes to keep our life running.

OP posts:
Picklechicken · 16/07/2025 11:39

DuskyPink1984 · 16/07/2025 11:24

There is no such thing as a perfect person, your DH is simply good at other things. If we were all good at everything maybe David Beckham would have been Prime Minister.

But I’m sure even David Beckham can use you tube or google to find out how to clean out a washing machine filter. This is basic adulting stuff.

Boredlass · 16/07/2025 11:43

TenderChicken · 16/07/2025 09:56

He kind of sounds like a dick who thinks he's above everyone else, tbh.

No he doesn’t!

Boredlass · 16/07/2025 11:44

Stop forcing him to do DIY when he doesn’t want to. Do you really want someone who’s crap at it doing it?

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:45

PollyBell · 16/07/2025 11:34

You lack confidence in it but he has to be able too? I presume there is things you cant do that he does and the reverse?

I lack confidence yet look on YouTube to figure out simple things and give things a go. He lacks confidence, won't even try and gets quite emotional about it. Ringing electricians isn't a confidence thing. It's just time. Locating and clearing a dishwasher filter isn't a confidence thing. It's just reading the manual.

There's nothing he can do that I can't when it comes to everyday life. He takes responsibility for the home wifi so I will confess I don't have a clue about it, but I lived on my own for years and didn't have a problem. If he wasn't around for whatever reason, I'd be able to figure it out and pick it up.

He deals with spiders, I suppose. I can't stand them. But I could get one of those long trap things.

He is very skilled in his hobbies and interests, and I'd be useless at them. I don't expect us to be the same and we all have strengths and weaknesses.

I'm just getting fed up of being the strong one when it comes to our actual life.

OP posts:
beAsensible1 · 16/07/2025 11:45

It sounds like he didn’t manage
friction in his daily life very well where he feels unequipped so he ignores.

I get the worry about dealing with tradies as it always feels like someone is stitching you up if you don’t know what’s going on.

but the refusal to google basic solution is pure obstitence n his part and you just need to have it out. Tell him it’s unfair that he won’t do basic googles especially when it’s jobs he can get sorted in a quiet house on his day off with space to make mess and clean up!

you have to force the issue. Leave him to do it, stop solving all the problems. I generally sort all the DIY stuff at home but I show DH the basics or send instructions and tell him to call if there’s an issue.

WestwardHo1 · 16/07/2025 11:46

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:54

Yeah, that's fair enough. Except he doesn't want any of the other chores off my plate either. I'm better with the animals, he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

It fair drives me mad.

Oh Lord he sounds insufferable.

I had a husband a little bit like this. Claimed not to notice when things needed doing (too busy seeing the bigger picture?), then resented being asked to do stuff, then refused to get a man in because apparently it was pointless paying someone to do something which any idiot could do, then had a really bad stab at doing said task, fucked it up, then left it looking shit but acted like I was ungrateful when I pointed out it was a bodge, the retort being "Well you do it next time then".