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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Passive Aggressive Washing Up ….. or Am I Being Unfair?

114 replies

PassiveAggWasherUpper · 01/04/2026 14:11

Using a name change for this one.

My husband works from home as a contractor. His hours can be 8–6 (sometimes later if he’s on call fixing issues), but he also has some flexibility – for example he might finish early some days to go to the gym.

I work 9–3:30, 4 days a week (term time), in quite a physical job where I’m on my feet most of the day.

The issue is the washing up. We don’t have space for a dishwasher, so everything is done by hand. When I get home, the washing up from the day – breakfast bowls from all of us, his lunch things, cups etc – is often just piled up waiting for me. I did rant about this once or twice because it felt frustrating walking in from work straight into a pile of dishes.

His solution now is to wash up only what he uses. So he washes his own plate, mug etc as he goes along, but leaves the children’s breakfast things, shared cups, etc for me to do when I get in.

When I mentioned this, I said it felt quite passive aggressive. He insists it’s not – he says he just doesn’t have 10 spare minutes in one go during the day to do everything, but washing his own things takes seconds so he just does that as he goes along.

The thing is, it’s giving me absolute rage every time I walk in and see the remaining pile. I do understand that he probably thinks he’s being helpful, but it feels a bit like he’s proving a point.

Part of me now wants to go full petty and just wash up my own things or only clean the bits of the house I personally use… which obviously isn’t the solution.

Am I being unreasonable to expect that if he’s home all day, the general daytime washing up would be done? Or is this a fair split and I need to let it go?

Interested to hear how others divide things when one partner WFH, particularly when there’s no dishwasher involved.

OP posts:
BridgetJonesV2 · 01/04/2026 15:37

I think people are missing that he's working from home. If he's home all day, he could leave them soaking for a few hours then quickly wipe/rinse when he's on lunch. Takes minutes if that. You're right OP, it is very passive aggressive and I'd be wanting to put a stop to it.

Hollycoco · 01/04/2026 15:46

theemmadilemma · 01/04/2026 15:35

Given that she mentions childrens breakfast, I think it's highly likley she's feeding them, dressing them, running them to school etc while he's already working, so probably not sitting around in her dressing gown ignoring the washing up.

No-one said she was sitting round in her dressing gown.

Personally, I get myself and 3 children ready and breakfasted in the morning, clean the kitchen, unload and load the dishwasher feed the pets, make lunchboxes and leave the house at 8am every morning. I work 20 hours per week and my husband works 40, so (absolutely rightly) a much higher percentage of the household jobs fall on me. My husband works from home and I don’t think it’s fair for me to go off to work and leave a messy kitchen for him to have to deal with, when he work much longer hours than me.

If it’s such an easy job that he could quickly fit into his work day, why isn't it a quick and easy job for her to do before leaving for work?

Hollycoco · 01/04/2026 15:50

BridgetJonesV2 · 01/04/2026 15:37

I think people are missing that he's working from home. If he's home all day, he could leave them soaking for a few hours then quickly wipe/rinse when he's on lunch. Takes minutes if that. You're right OP, it is very passive aggressive and I'd be wanting to put a stop to it.

Yes he’s working from home 8-6.

She is also home from 4-6pm every day not working.

Surely she can do this quick and easy job in the two hours she has extra each day, when he is working but she is not.

Myneighbourisanosyoldgit · 01/04/2026 16:00

suburburban · 01/04/2026 14:14

I’d be so cross too

he could at least soak the stuff at the same time he is washing up his stuff, I’m sure he could make time

shame you can’t squash a dishwasher in somewhere, game changer

Would he load his stuff into the dishwasher and who would end up unloading it 🤔OP when you walk through the door, you mug spoon is in the... might as well empty it while your there.
He needs a kick up the arse for being lazy. I've got some steel toe cap boots...😉

redskyAtNigh · 01/04/2026 16:01

If DH was not working at home, OP would be coming back to the unwashed breakfast things regardless. So, if they bother her that much, why are they not being washed before she leaves in the morning?

I think it's quite passive aggressive on her part, to leave them there and then complain that they are still there when she gets home from work. If OP thinks this is her DH's responsibility to wash them, then perhaps they could discuss and agree this rather than her just ranting at him?

Easterbunnyishotandcross · 01/04/2026 16:03

I hope you cook meals for 1....

Astra53 · 01/04/2026 16:05

Why not throw everything into a sink of soapy hot water before you go. Your husband can get it all out later and leave on the drainer to dry. You can put it away when you get in. Problem solved.

Myneighbourisanosyoldgit · 01/04/2026 16:07

It's an idea but would still have to be rinsed after sitting cold dirty water before draining though. Not my idea of fun.

suburburban · 01/04/2026 16:07

Differentforgirls · 01/04/2026 15:27

I don’t get dishwashers and I have never had one. Surely it’s easier just to wash the dishes, and put them away, rather than rinse them, load them, unload them, use electricity to wash them, then put them away?

Edited

I really love my dishwasher and it is labour and time saving, you don’t need to rinse the dishes and it tidies up kitchen

DPs had one so I was used to it

theemmadilemma · 01/04/2026 16:16

So much projection here. 😂

I work from home, so I very much know it's still working, still busy. But I do think that actually being there, it really wouldn't take much to wash eveything and is achieveable in the time he has.

I'd love to hear from the OP about balance in the household - because a man who will happily just wash his own stuff and ignore the rest and think that's the solution to the point raised, or fair, or nice, or well anything other than PA - seems likley to me to be not doing so much of the child raising/house work.

You're all saying how much extra he works, but ignoring all the pieces around that.

Happyjoe · 01/04/2026 16:16

This would wind me up so much, he's been so childish. Jesus.
Right, from now on, he does his own cooking, his own washing, his own organising...
Then he will see what it's like not being a team player!

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 16:17

Raindropskeepfallingon · 01/04/2026 15:21

So why can’t she find the time in the same ten hour period, of which she’s only working 6.5 hours. Why shouldn’t she fit the dishes into her day?

I’d be annoyed to come down for my lunch after starting work at 8am to be faced with a load of breakfast dishes I might think my partner could have just done before they left for work, presumably considerably after 8am. Being annoyed at dishes being left for you works both ways.

I'd be willing to wager that OP does pretty much everything else as well.

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 16:18

If he is working, he's working.

I do not wfh, but I did in the pandemic. I would often have back to back mtgs, literally no time in between. Or time pegged to do specific activities: 45 mins, review business case ahead of 3pm meeting. That sort of thing. He may well not have time.

I am in the office now and some days I have short breaks and walk downstairs or look at crap on MN for 5 mins. But usually, I am solid with mtgs and generally do not have a lunch break.

If OP is home 4-6 why is she not doing it?

Happyjoe · 01/04/2026 16:18

redskyAtNigh · 01/04/2026 16:01

If DH was not working at home, OP would be coming back to the unwashed breakfast things regardless. So, if they bother her that much, why are they not being washed before she leaves in the morning?

I think it's quite passive aggressive on her part, to leave them there and then complain that they are still there when she gets home from work. If OP thinks this is her DH's responsibility to wash them, then perhaps they could discuss and agree this rather than her just ranting at him?

Passive aggressive is the washing of his own stuff, not the OP. And before she leaves in the morning? So it's always her job is it?!

When did people stop being a team?

Boomer55 · 01/04/2026 16:18

How long does it take anyone to run a bowl of hot soapy water? 🤷‍♀️

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 16:19

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 16:17

I'd be willing to wager that OP does pretty much everything else as well.

But if the H works 10h a day year round, and she works 9-4 and only term time, why wouldn't that be the case?

Otherwise he would have a massively higher workload than her?

Happyjoe · 01/04/2026 16:22

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 16:19

But if the H works 10h a day year round, and she works 9-4 and only term time, why wouldn't that be the case?

Otherwise he would have a massively higher workload than her?

But he finds time to go to the gym when he finishes early but not wash up? And OP works almost the same hours and has to get to work, I bet too she gets the children ready and drops them off..

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 16:27

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 16:19

But if the H works 10h a day year round, and she works 9-4 and only term time, why wouldn't that be the case?

Otherwise he would have a massively higher workload than her?

He has time to go to the gym and do his own washing up (and presumably generate it with drink and food breaks). I assume she has a commute and works term time to look after children. A man that will wash up his own stuff, but not 2 plates and 2 mugs by the sink is not a team player.

I say this as a home worker.

Myneighbourisanosyoldgit · 01/04/2026 16:27

Boomer55 · 01/04/2026 16:18

How long does it take anyone to run a bowl of hot soapy water? 🤷‍♀️

And for anyone to wash up? 🤔

Livelovelaughfuckoff · 01/04/2026 16:28

Presumably if the OP is working 9am to 3pm term time then the rest of the time she is by default the on duty parent. I'm guessing she is the one getting the kids fed and dressed for school and dropping them off and picking them up. Presumably she is not popping off to the gym at 3pm.

Just because someone works less hours in order to fit around SHARED children it does not make them the family skivvy.

Livelovelaughfuckoff · 01/04/2026 16:30

I also agree if he's running enough water to wash his breakfast bowl, cups and lunch plate then it will only add on less than five minutes to wash a couple of extra bowls and cups. He knows he isn't doing you a favour he is deliberately being a twat.

SapphireOpal · 01/04/2026 16:30

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 14:16

What an ass. How long does it take to do a couple of plates and mugs from breakfast. This is 100% a power move - the responsibility for washing up is yours OP, he's just doing you a favour by covering his own.

He's working!

He's only washing his own stuff because OP had a totally unjustified rant at him about it.

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 16:32

SapphireOpal · 01/04/2026 16:30

He's working!

He's only washing his own stuff because OP had a totally unjustified rant at him about it.

As he should, given he is an adult.

Would you, at work in an office, just leave your dirty stuff everywhere for others to clean up? Because you were busy working? I can't imagine you'd be very popular.

YouthVitalityFrostbite · 01/04/2026 16:33

Washing up his own stuff but leaving yours and the kids is a lovely way to say the children are your responsibility, isn't it.