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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think I maybe just have to lower my expectations and realise that DH will never change?

229 replies

confusedlots · 02/10/2025 21:49

Numerous conversations about similar issues have been had over the past few years, but it’s clear DH never thinks he’s done anything wrong, and usually turns the conversation around to being about me nagging him, and we never get anywhere.

Dirty plates left on the worktop right on top of the dishwasher (why not just put them in the dishwasher?). On the odd occasion he might empty the dishwasher he leaves half of the clean plates on the worktop instead of putting them away in the cupboards which are right beside him.

Empty milk cartons left on the worktop instead of being rinsed out and put in the recycling bin.

He took DS out recently and they ended up getting soaked heading back to the car. They came home, DH got dried and changed and made himself a cup of tea and sat down. I was sorting laundry and just asked where DS was and he had left him in dripping wet clothes to play in his room and hadn’t thought that he should maybe make sure he got changed into something dry. DS is 7.

DH takes the kids to breakfast club 1 day a week (after I insisted on this) but this still involved me sorting out the uniforms, lunches, getting kids and myself ready etc. DH just got up and showered, had his breakfast and dropped the kids on his way to work. So I asked that on his one day, he sorted everything out for the kids too, like I do every other day. It was a disaster and the mornings were so stressful for everyone that I have had to intervene for everyone’s sanity.

The final straw was when I tried to calmly bring this up again recently and he actually told me that he didn’t think I did that much in the home, and I could tell that he actually really believes this. I do all the laundry (his included), the majority of the food shopping, a lot of the cooking (he does cook 2 or 3 nights a week due to our schedules to be fair to him), all the life admin, kids admin, sorting birthday parties/presents, booking clubs and lessons, etc, you know what it involves! So trying not to antagonise the situation I calmly said that if he felt I didn’t do very much around the home that he wouldn’t notice if I continued not to do it for the next month, and then he accused me of being petty and not trying to do the best for our family.

I honestly don’t know where to go from here. It’s the fact that he can’t see my point of view that upsets me the most, despite me trying to talk about things calmly and not be accusatory. He’s definitely got a degree of neurodiversity going on, although never diagnosed, so I’m sure that’s a major factor in this.

Help! I really think we should be able to make this work but I’m struggling to see how when he can’t see my point of view.

OP posts:
Sparklesandspandexgallore · 04/10/2025 09:19

So he did his washing and left it in the machine. Solution: remove it from the washing machine, just chuck it anywhere, back in the linen basket, in a washing basket then do your washing.
To he frank I couldn’t live like this. I know it’s hard but I’d rather get divorced.
Your husband is a role model to his children. He is teaching them that men are far too important to do any grunt work. That all domestic work, including caring for children is the sole responsibility of females.
Your son will most likely end up single and alone. Women are starting to reject this misogynistic behaviour. Then he will be one of those spiteful incels blaming women for wanting a man who steps up.
You could put a time limit on this. Tell your husband what you want and give him time to change. Then leave if he fails to step up.

BitOutOfPractice · 04/10/2025 09:26

Fiftyandme · 03/10/2025 10:50

Honestly, frok the sounds of it, no matter what you do he’ll just come up with somd way to rebuffen you point out. Ivd downed tools on numerous occasions - I’m just told that either the house is no different and this it’s obvious I do very little anyway, or I’m told that it prove how lazy I am and Hes having to pick up my slack and the house is stories becayse of him.

It’s nasty.

I now don’t cook for him, I barely do anything but the bare minimum Becsuse why should I, I don’t do his laundry, I dong shop for him if he asks me to do something his way yhd answer is ‘no’, I don’t have anthing to do with him, He certainly diesnt get to use my body for sex and I’m told I’m selfish but at least I’m not his skivvy and sex toy, and he can hail himself as some sort of hero for spending 40 minutes loading the dishwasher and wiping the kitchen counters at a snails pace IDGAF anymore.

Oh love that sounds so miserable. Why don’t you leave?

JHound · 05/10/2025 16:41

confusedlots · 03/10/2025 19:11

For those asking why I married someone like this and expected him to change, it wasn’t like this at all before we were married. But then all we really had to take up our time was our jobs, the rest of our time was our own to spend time cooking together, cleaning up together, getting any jobs done around the house etc. He lived on his own for a number of years before meeting me and was perfectly capable of doing his washing, cooking etc.

But having kids changes things massively. Life is not our own any more, it’s busy, there’s much more stuff to do, kids clothes to wash and sort out the stuff that’s too small, clubs to take them to, music practice and homework’s to help them with, you all know what it’s like. Kids create mess and work but I don’t think he grasps just how much stuff needs done, and how important it therefore is to share the load. If it was only the 2 of us, I don’t think I’d be overly bothered about putting another dish in the dishwasher, but when that’s on top of all of the other stuff that needs done, you start to feel like someone’s maid.

And for those saying I need to step up because I have a day off most weeks, in reality I have 5 hours most weeks on my day off to myself. 5 hours to do food prep for the week, maybe do a food shop, clean the house, catch up with laundry, shop for things like birthday presents, things the kids need for a club etc, and god forbid I might occasionally take an hour to myself for some self care to meet up with a friend for a coffee or go for a run.

I feel I’ve tried so many things over the past couple of years but nothing has really changed. I’ve tried to leave things and see if he eventually does them (usually he doesn’t), I’ve stopped doing his laundry (he eventually did a wash, left it in the washing machine for a day and then I had to sort it out anyway when I wanted to use the machine), I’ve asked him to take responsibility for the kids one day a week (we have had different issues with this, kids going to school without a coat or lunch etc which is not fair on them). The house ends up being chaotic and not a nice environment for anyone and I can’t deal with it.

I really think we should be able to make this work, but it’s like hitting my head against a brick wall.

I don’t think I’d be overly bothered about putting another dish in the dishwasher, but when that’s on top of all of the other stuff that needs done, you start to feel like someone’s maid.

So before the children did you just “put another dish in the dishwasher for him”.

It sounds less like you wanted him to change but more that you took on the extra load before kids because it did not feel like that big a deal.

LucyLoo1972 · 02/02/2026 01:03

Gardendiary · 02/10/2025 21:54

My husband has adhd and can be pretty useless and chaotic sometimes. However he thinks im a goddess for juggling everything that I do. Anything less than complete appreciation would be a deal breaker for me.

my husabnd shoes zero appreciation

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