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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:
BoredZelda · 16/07/2025 11:47

This isn’t about DIY it’s about him not contributing anything to the household. There is no reason he should do all the DIY, just because your dad was a builder and it’s what you expect. If he isn’t doing anything else, that’s the real problem.

Eyesopenwideawake · 16/07/2025 11:47

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:36

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.

You need to have this conversation with him, before this feeling turns from resentment to bitterness. If he is willing to address the underlying issue (fear of failure would be my guess) then that's relatively easy to fix. But only if he wants to.

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 11:49

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:36

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.

This is a lot of words to use when one will do: cocklodger.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:52

BoredZelda · 16/07/2025 11:47

This isn’t about DIY it’s about him not contributing anything to the household. There is no reason he should do all the DIY, just because your dad was a builder and it’s what you expect. If he isn’t doing anything else, that’s the real problem.

I've never said I expect him to do all the DIY just because my Dad/my ex did. I mentioned that because it explains why I (happily) project manage bigger stuff. I am better placed. I understand what needs a trade and what doesn't, for a start.

But you're right. It isn't about DIY really.

OP posts:
BIossomtoes · 16/07/2025 11:53

parietal · 16/07/2025 09:55

If he wants to get in trades, let him organise it and pay for it. If he wants to pay someone £100 to clean the dishwasher filter instead of doing it himself, let him.

I know that seems silly but it is better than arguing about it.

It’s not silly. Neither of us is remotely practical so we pay for these things.

ReignOfError · 16/07/2025 12:03

He Just sounds like a lazy sexist. As you’ve pointed out, you’re not his secretary or servant (or mother, although I didn’t let either of my sons get away with that sort of crap).

What does he do that makes him an equal partner in your relationship?

MyCyanReader · 16/07/2025 12:14

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:20

Because I hate them too. Who loves cleaning the dishwasher filter? Or going down to B&Q? It's just shit that needs doing.

It's not about the money he is bringing in, it's about how we use our time. I would like free time too.

But it's clearly shit you're better at doing than him. My DH hates phoning people so I just do it. When there is something you're both shit at, then the list shit-at-it person does it!

Venalopolos · 16/07/2025 12:17

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:31

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.

Edited

I’d like to think I’d also spot the cat sick, and do something about it… although berry hunter DH did miss some dog sick in the kitchen the other day, but in his defence it was in the far corner and he was heading out to work.

MyCyanReader · 16/07/2025 12:18

CanOfMangoTango · 16/07/2025 10:24

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.

My DH really doesn't mind fixing stuff like that. Shower drains, dishwasher issues etc.. I let him do it as it makes me gag.

I'm more the "fix small things that aren't essential" person, or contacting other people to do stuff we can't or don't want to do. My DH hates dealing with people and organising stuff. I don't mind.

Everyone has their thing. As long as the OPs DH is pulling his weight at something!

TotHappy · 16/07/2025 12:21

HE'S NOT THOUGH THAT'S WHAT SHE'S SAYING!

MyMilchick · 16/07/2025 12:22

If he did other things then it wouldn't bother me but he sounds like a lazy fucker doing the bare minimum

myplace · 16/07/2025 12:26

Ask Him why he is happy to see you work more hours than he does, do more chores than he does, and have less time for relaxation, hobbies and fun than he does.

Ask him why your life should be harder and more expensive with him in it, than it is without him.

When he has answered, decide what to do about that.

KPPlumbing · 16/07/2025 12:30

My husband is good at diy and can pretty much do or fix anything that he puts his mind to. He laid our wooden floors, he takes the engine of his car apart to fix mechanical issues, he could rewire a house and so on.

But our marriage came to a head a few years ago because he never actually DID anything. He didn't initiate anything. I earned more, worked more hours, was responsible for most chores at home, all life admin, the garden, diy, painting and decorating, getting in trades, booking holidays - the lot.

I told him I was looking at flats to rent on my own.

He said during that time "but you're interested in gardening, I'm not". I said "we're not talking pretty flowers here - I'm out there sweeping leaves, digging over beds and cutting down trees! I'm not interested in that stuff either, but it needs doing!"

Thankfully he took our crisis talks as a wake up call, retrained from a dead end office job into a trade and now works hard and long hours, and he's got much more get up and go. He knows how close I came to leaving him, and pulls his weight accordingly now.

C8H10N4O2 · 16/07/2025 12:30

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 11:52

I've never said I expect him to do all the DIY just because my Dad/my ex did. I mentioned that because it explains why I (happily) project manage bigger stuff. I am better placed. I understand what needs a trade and what doesn't, for a start.

But you're right. It isn't about DIY really.

Why does he not work full time if he isn’t taking on a greater part of the household responsibilities? He could work full time and pay for someone to do the lengthy list of jobs he “can’t” do.

Honestly it sounds more like laziness and strategic incompetence. Routine maintenance such a cleaning out a dishwasher filter is no more complex or requiring a professional than scrubbing out the loo or separating washing properly. Its not DIY, it is basic to being an adult with a home. We either learn to do them or put in the hours to pay someone else.

It never ceases to amaze me how some people can be so highly skilled at their hobbies but apparently “unable" to set the washing machine to the correct temperature. Or more accurately they can be skilled where they put in the effort but don’t bother when it comes to everyday household tasks.

Notmyreality · 16/07/2025 12:31

He’s scared of it and feels emasculated by his inability to do it.

DidILeaveTheGasOn · 16/07/2025 12:32

Do you want to grow old with this guy? Will he watch you struggle to maintain the home and coordinate tradesmen etc in old age?

It feels like he's content to watch you do it all now because it's beneath him.

nam3c4ang3 · 16/07/2025 12:33

Sorry - he sounds useless. Why are you even still with him? You sound like his mother, not his wife.

GasPanic · 16/07/2025 12:33

DIY has consequences.

Sometimes you can do a shit job. Sometimes you can do a downright dangerous job. Sometimes you can save massive amounts of money for very little work. Sometimes you can toil for hours on end and save a pittance.

TBH most people would be better at doing more at what they are really good at and using the money to pay for DIY than being an amateur DIYer. For me this is definitely true. But I love learning about the house and trying new stuff.

The question is less about whether partner does X or Y but more about whether you are working fairly and together as a team. After all, if it is that important than something should be DIY'd you do have the option of literally doing it yourself rather than expecting someone else to do it.

Blobbitymacblob · 16/07/2025 12:34

Have you read Fair Play? She talks about the invisible jobs and pushes against the gender bias that sees women doing far more invisible labour at home. The diy is a bit of a red herring here, but you’re still getting slapped in the face with a wet fish!

The Fair Play Book | Fair Play Life

https://www.fairplaylife.com/the-book

Octonaut4Life · 16/07/2025 12:37

The issue here isn't the DIY, it's just that his excuses for why he's not doing that seem to annoy you more than his excuses for why he's not doing everything else. The issue is that he is a lazy misogynist who seems to be fine to sit back and do his hobbies and watch you so everything.

Namechangetheyarewatching · 16/07/2025 12:39

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.

Fuck that !!

He is your common garden lazy fucking arsehole

He wants to swan around while you pick up ALL of the slack, tell him to get a fucking proper job or pick up the slack or get the fuck out!!

LifeInAHamsterWheel · 16/07/2025 12:39

Having read your OP and updates, this isn't really about DIY it's a complete lack of responsibility and accountability from your DH. My DH abhors DIY and like others have mentioned would rather pay from his own pocket to get someone else to do a job than try it himself. But he certainly pulls his weight in other areas. It sounds like your hubands believes he can just excuse himself from all domestic responsibilities and that's just not on. Rather than needing to 'man up' he just needs to grow up and be the adult we all have to be.

RollerSkateLikePeggy · 16/07/2025 12:46

@BIossomtoes out of interest, where do you draw the line? Do you get someone in to clean the vacuum filter every month? Change a light bulb? Tighten a screw on something that's loose? Cleaning the dishwasher/washing machine filter is regular house maintenance and, unless you have physical disabilities or are stonkingly wealthy I'm really surprised that someone would rather pay someone than spend five minutes doing the job.

Muffinmam · 16/07/2025 12:50

I had to stop reading.

Your husband is lazy.

He works part-time and does nothing around the house. Calling an electrician or a plumber isn’t DIY - it’s picking up the phone. You work full-time - he’s the one home during the week and this bone idle man won’t even pick up the phone!

He won’t clean out the dishwasher and makes zero attempt to clean mold out of the washing machine.

Are you subsidising his existence financially? Because this man is a terrible example to your son!

RedPony1 · 16/07/2025 12:50

myplace · 16/07/2025 12:26

Ask Him why he is happy to see you work more hours than he does, do more chores than he does, and have less time for relaxation, hobbies and fun than he does.

Ask him why your life should be harder and more expensive with him in it, than it is without him.

When he has answered, decide what to do about that.

This!!