Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
MyMilchick · 16/07/2025 14:49

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 14:48

To quote another recent poster: Stand back!

It's the thread police. 😂

I don't think you know what that means lol

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:49

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:27

I think he's kinda brainwashed me into thinking I'm the unreasonable one. He's a bit of an old hippy - like, it's so bourgeois to own a house and a garden, the rental model works well all over Europe, it doesn't matter if the garden's overgrown and things are falling down, caring about material things is just not his thing, he's never been interested in material possessions... It's a framing that positions me as morally inferior.

It's also bullshit as he's far more into creature comforts than he'd let on. I know he appreciates and values the home on a deep level. He just wants it all to happen around him.

I also agree I'm a mug.

Edited

You’re a mug.

He’s hanging on to his old bullshit mindset, knowing full well you’re supplying the money, the clean home, the functioning home, and he’s sitting on his arse, playing a Nintendo Switch, with the luxury of not having to be a ‘capitalist bourgeoisie’. 🤮

In reality he’s a lazy old twat with a superiority complex. Vile.

GreenShimmers · 16/07/2025 14:50

I'm terrible at this stuff too so I empathise with your DH. Luckily my other half is good at it and likes doing it. If I didn't have him I would call someone.
You can't make him do it, if he's offering to get someone in let him pay for it and do it that way.
We don't all fix things ourselves.

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 14:51

MyMilchick · 16/07/2025 14:49

I don't think you know what that means lol

😂

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:52

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 14:51

😂

Reckon you guys can stop the in-fighting with your pass-agg ‘lol’s and cry laughing emojis?

(That is thread policing, by the way)

EmeraldShamrock000 · 16/07/2025 14:54

You picked him, you can't have it all.
He should hire a handy man.

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 14:55

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:52

Reckon you guys can stop the in-fighting with your pass-agg ‘lol’s and cry laughing emojis?

(That is thread policing, by the way)

Perceive it as you will. I find it all truly funny😂

C8H10N4O2 · 16/07/2025 14:55

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:27

I think he's kinda brainwashed me into thinking I'm the unreasonable one. He's a bit of an old hippy - like, it's so bourgeois to own a house and a garden, the rental model works well all over Europe, it doesn't matter if the garden's overgrown and things are falling down, caring about material things is just not his thing, he's never been interested in material possessions... It's a framing that positions me as morally inferior.

It's also bullshit as he's far more into creature comforts than he'd let on. I know he appreciates and values the home on a deep level. He just wants it all to happen around him.

I also agree I'm a mug.

Edited

He’s taking you for a ride. He’s above being a “drudge” but he is quite happy for you to be a drudge on his behalf. Its too bourgeois to own a house and garden but he is quite happy for you to fund a house and garden on his behalf. But sitting on his arse gaming all day makes him one of the righteous proletariat quite how exactly?

He doesn’t even do all the laundry which is one of his few tasks, let alone do it properly by ensuring the machine is kept clean. He went part time to support you but what did he actually do apart from what any childminder would do charged with wraparound care?

Honestly this all reminds me of the kind of self righteous brocialists I knew in my teens who were full on putting the world to rights, would pop up on every picket line and would describe themselves as ‘feminists’ "(but just make the tea and do my laundry luv whilst I put the world to rights)

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:56

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:11

Sorry, he barely works, just plays pathetic computer games all day? What?

He doesn't play computer games all day. He has lots of hobbies that he gets stuck into, one of which is computer games. And he works when he has to. It's a flexi contract, though we have agreed he will up to 4 days.

A piece of information I haven't given because it will just wind some of you up even more is that he works for my business and has a similar attitude to tasks I give him at work that he doesn't want to do. Like get under the skin of GDPR. He doesn't know anything about GDPR, and doesn't want to know anything about GDPR.

No. No one does. Not one human on the planet wants to know about GDPR. And yet here we are, with legal obligations.

I've offered to send him on training but he's just not interested.

OP posts:
Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:58

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 14:55

Perceive it as you will. I find it all truly funny😂

Don’t really understand why, but sure.

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 15:00

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:56

He doesn't play computer games all day. He has lots of hobbies that he gets stuck into, one of which is computer games. And he works when he has to. It's a flexi contract, though we have agreed he will up to 4 days.

A piece of information I haven't given because it will just wind some of you up even more is that he works for my business and has a similar attitude to tasks I give him at work that he doesn't want to do. Like get under the skin of GDPR. He doesn't know anything about GDPR, and doesn't want to know anything about GDPR.

No. No one does. Not one human on the planet wants to know about GDPR. And yet here we are, with legal obligations.

I've offered to send him on training but he's just not interested.

Edited

So his only job is for you? And he does it both badly, and hardly at all? And just spends time at home, in a home you pay for and you maintain, enjoying himself doing his ‘hobbies’, while you work all hours?

Jesus Christ.

EmeraldShamrock000 · 16/07/2025 15:01

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:56

He doesn't play computer games all day. He has lots of hobbies that he gets stuck into, one of which is computer games. And he works when he has to. It's a flexi contract, though we have agreed he will up to 4 days.

A piece of information I haven't given because it will just wind some of you up even more is that he works for my business and has a similar attitude to tasks I give him at work that he doesn't want to do. Like get under the skin of GDPR. He doesn't know anything about GDPR, and doesn't want to know anything about GDPR.

No. No one does. Not one human on the planet wants to know about GDPR. And yet here we are, with legal obligations.

I've offered to send him on training but he's just not interested.

Edited

He needs a kick up the arse and a heavier workload or he might get fired.
I'd come down heavy now if you want change for your future, he decides to either work with you or continue to work against you, with consequences.

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 15:02

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 14:58

Don’t really understand why, but sure.

That's okay, you don't need to understand why I find some things to be amusing. That would be going off topic.

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 15:04

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:56

He doesn't play computer games all day. He has lots of hobbies that he gets stuck into, one of which is computer games. And he works when he has to. It's a flexi contract, though we have agreed he will up to 4 days.

A piece of information I haven't given because it will just wind some of you up even more is that he works for my business and has a similar attitude to tasks I give him at work that he doesn't want to do. Like get under the skin of GDPR. He doesn't know anything about GDPR, and doesn't want to know anything about GDPR.

No. No one does. Not one human on the planet wants to know about GDPR. And yet here we are, with legal obligations.

I've offered to send him on training but he's just not interested.

Edited

But that's all fine OP, because you lurve him and he's a polymath (he can play computer games and heat up pizza).

My cunt has slammed shut just reading about this loser, but he obviously does it for you.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 15:07

Rabbitsockpeony · 16/07/2025 15:00

So his only job is for you? And he does it both badly, and hardly at all? And just spends time at home, in a home you pay for and you maintain, enjoying himself doing his ‘hobbies’, while you work all hours?

Jesus Christ.

The bits of his job he enjoys, he does very very well. He's very conscientious.

But anything new that he's not done before and doesn't want to do, he panics. He will try new things he's interested in. He's really stretched himself in some areas of his job and does well at them. But anything he considers hard or boring or not something he's done before, he freaks out.

OP posts:
ForZanyAquaViewer · 16/07/2025 15:09

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 13:17

He does do almost all the laundry and places the order for the online food shop, and puts it away.

His responsibilities are cooking 2 nights a week, the laundry, the online food shop, feeding the dogs at night, paying the home insurance and broadband bills, and booking one of the dogs into the groomers and taking her. When I say responsibility, I mean they are things he takes on autonomously that I don't have to think about.

He will help, if asked, with things like taking the animals to the vets, or feeding the cats and dogs at other times, or running my son about.

It's not like he does nothing.

My son mows the lawn, takes the bins out, cooks one night a week and will do special annual tasks for me like treat garden furniture, steam clean the sofa or paint the decking - which my husband would complain about if asked. My son complains too, but gets on.

I am responsible for running a business/managing 17 people, everything to do with my son (understandable), everything to do with the animals, and everything in the house and garden, including paying the bills. I do the 'extra' laundry - making sure our bath towels and the dog towels get washed, the animal beds, the rugs. If something breaks, I replace it. If we run out of ibuprofen or whatever, I sort it. I sort the holidays, decorating, order the logs... If a cupboard has become a complete shithole, I clear it.

I don't know. Maybe it's more balanced than I think. Maybe I'm just furious about dishwashers.

My husband and I met when he was in his 40s. As I said, he'd always rented and while his flat was really nice and homely and clean, it was a single man's pad. All the essentials covered. He's moved into a family home with me that has two gardens and is up and running, and I expect it IS a culture shock, going from being a tenant to a homeowner. There's a lot of stuff that goes into a family home that he has never had to consider.

But we've been together for ten years and that's plenty of time to get up to speed.

I don't have very high standards of cleanliness, once a room is decorated that's it and done for me for a decade if I can get away with it, I'm not really into gardens so a gardener weeds it once a month for me, my son mows it and I just keep on top of things... It's not like I'm a martyr to the house.

What you’ve listed him as doing is pretty much nothing, tbh. I genuinely don’t understand why you would accept this?

ClearFruit · 16/07/2025 15:09

You're living with someone who has absolutely mugged you off, and brainwashed you into thinking you shouldn't expect more from him. He sounds like a prick of the highest order, he'd be out of the door if I was married to him, Jesus Christ.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 15:09

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 15:04

But that's all fine OP, because you lurve him and he's a polymath (he can play computer games and heat up pizza).

My cunt has slammed shut just reading about this loser, but he obviously does it for you.

In fairness my own cunt is not really feeling it right now. And it's really difficult because he's going through an extremely hard time with some family stuff and I know he could do with more of my support than I'm giving him, but I'm all given out and overloaded to the max. The dishwasher last week snapped something inside me. It's stupid, but if our relationship was to end, I could pinpoint that moment and he'd think I was absolutely mad. Ending a marriage over dishwasher maintenance?

OP posts:
ForZanyAquaViewer · 16/07/2025 15:12

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 14:10

He would take GREAT umbrage at being accused of being lazy. I think he sees it as a point of principle and pride that he won't spend his one rare and precious life doing drudge.

He will say things like, "You can spend your time doing these things but that's your choice - you're not dragging me into it, I'm not going to get sucked down too." Not in response to the principle of doing more, but if I'm frustrated at the end of a day DOING stuff while he's played on his Switch or whatever. And sometimes I do start things then ask for help in the middle, rather than mentally prepare him for the task/day ahead. He does not like to be ambushed with chores.

I suppose I'm not used to living with someone who doesn't see it as their responsibility too.

Jesus Christ.

I’m actually starting to get annoyed with you! How is it possible that you let him take the piss to this extent? What’s the matter with you?!

ClearFruit · 16/07/2025 15:12

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 15:09

In fairness my own cunt is not really feeling it right now. And it's really difficult because he's going through an extremely hard time with some family stuff and I know he could do with more of my support than I'm giving him, but I'm all given out and overloaded to the max. The dishwasher last week snapped something inside me. It's stupid, but if our relationship was to end, I could pinpoint that moment and he'd think I was absolutely mad. Ending a marriage over dishwasher maintenance?

Edited

Valid, with a knob like him in the house. Tell him to go.

StrawberrySquash · 16/07/2025 15:14

He should be able to learn. No one wants to clean a dishwasher filter, but we googled and we suck it up.

OP if this stuff is genuinely stressing him out and it's not just strategic incompetence then I'd say look, we need to get you more confident. So we will do this together. Meaning he Googles and you both look at stuff and work it out together. But he needs to be putting the work in. You are just there to enable. Make it clear you will not be judging his lack of dishwasher expertise, but you will be judging a lack of initiative and engagement.

And if he feels uncomfortable not knowing stuff, that's understandable but he needs to get past that discomfort and do stuff.
xkcd: Ten Thousand
https://xkcd.com/1053/

Ten Thousand

https://xkcd.com/1053/

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 15:14

Okay, I'll stop being sarcastic for a second, real talk.

I know the type of man he is, I do believe you when you say he's an intellectual. He's the type of man who in decades past would have lived in one of those academic boarding houses at one of the great universities, with a housekeeper looking after him while he explores the recesses of his mind and creates something wonderful—literature, science, music, whatever.

These men can be dazzling and attractive, but they cannot be good partners. He cannot be the person you want him to be.

Edited to add: they're also horribly egotistical pricks, who can't be in functional relationships.

There is absolutely no point going on and on about it on here, or expecting there to be a third option besides put up with paying him whilst being his housekeeper, or boot him out.

Keep him as a boyfriend if you want, but he'll never be your partner.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 15:15

ForZanyAquaViewer · 16/07/2025 15:12

Jesus Christ.

I’m actually starting to get annoyed with you! How is it possible that you let him take the piss to this extent? What’s the matter with you?!

I hate conflict, and he gets really angry and defensive and turns it around on me then won't let me speak, he just talks and talks and talks and when I try to make a point he doesn't let me finish and then talks and talks and talks over me, until I absolutely lose my fucking shit and scream at him, and then he'll say, "I don't have to listen to this. Look at you. I don't want to listen to this."

Or he'll just shut it down by saying, "LEAVE. ME. ALONE."

OP posts:
OvernightBloats · 16/07/2025 15:18

He has a superiority complex - most chores are beneath him. Will be very difficult to reverse this attitude.

C8H10N4O2 · 16/07/2025 15:20

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 15:07

The bits of his job he enjoys, he does very very well. He's very conscientious.

But anything new that he's not done before and doesn't want to do, he panics. He will try new things he's interested in. He's really stretched himself in some areas of his job and does well at them. But anything he considers hard or boring or not something he's done before, he freaks out.

How many of your employees get to dictate to you what pieces of the job they are going to do and what they can’t be arsed to do and you can do yourself?

Swipe left for the next trending thread