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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:
Chilly80 · 01/04/2026 19:49

He might be at home but he's working.

NeverDropYourMooncup · 01/04/2026 19:49

I can't help but think if I worked longer hours, year round, at home and said DP was ranting that I should do all the washing up and more housework because I could 'easily fit it between calls' whilst he worked fewer hours and had school holidays off, my post on here would be mostly full of LTB and 'but you literally work in the home'.

Having been given one when I didn't think it was necessary, I would now move Heaven and Earth to find a way to fit a dishwasher in somewhere, though.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 01/04/2026 19:51

GriseldaandMike · 01/04/2026 18:07

You scrape any big bits (the same as you would before putting them in washing up water unless you change that every two items) but they don't need contact with water before being loaded into the dishwasher.

I disagree. I did realise this was what you thought from your first post.

Iamnotunreasonablenow · 01/04/2026 20:06

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

A dishwasher is not necessarily a game changer. Perhaps the OP and DH would then have issues over who loads and unloads the dishwasher. Attitude change required? Either OP or DH should do all of the work. Like a child learning to take turns. The other one should take the bins out perhaps? Maybe the children should help too? Presumably some boundaries would be useful when the children are at home and DH is working from home. As an old man I think mum and dad stereotypes are useful sometimes but not necessarily with DW doing the washing up! With roles "reversed". However when we had no dishwasher it was quite sociable us both doing it one washing, one drying. I miss it.

watchingthishtread · 01/04/2026 20:36

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.

I disagree. I think it might actually be the solution. The only way he'll see how much you do for everyone else might be for you to you stop doing it. Let the dishes pile up. Let the laundry pile up. Let the dust pile up until it reaches a point where you can both sit down and fairly divide the workload.

Plmnki · 01/04/2026 21:08

Get a 45cm dishwasher. You can make it fit. You can. Life is too short for shit like this.

suburburban · 01/04/2026 21:54

Iamnotunreasonablenow · 01/04/2026 20:06

A dishwasher is not necessarily a game changer. Perhaps the OP and DH would then have issues over who loads and unloads the dishwasher. Attitude change required? Either OP or DH should do all of the work. Like a child learning to take turns. The other one should take the bins out perhaps? Maybe the children should help too? Presumably some boundaries would be useful when the children are at home and DH is working from home. As an old man I think mum and dad stereotypes are useful sometimes but not necessarily with DW doing the washing up! With roles "reversed". However when we had no dishwasher it was quite sociable us both doing it one washing, one drying. I miss it.

Yes I agree it’s got to be a shared effort regardless of a dishwasher or not

PyongyangKipperbang · 01/04/2026 22:02

Am I the only one utterly sick of responses like "get a dishwasher"?

Posts that a husband wont pull his weight on cleaning? Get a cleaner.

It doesnt address the issue of a man who treats his wife like a fucking maid! A man who treats his wife like the nanny because "I have been at work all day", utterly devaluing everything she does, be it in the house or out!

I do absolutely everything in my house because I am a single mother by necessity and single by choice. And I cannot over state how much better it is to do it all knowing that I am simply doing what needs to be done because only I can do it, and not because some lazy entitled cunt decided that cleaning the bog or doing the kids washing is beneath him.

It saddens me that so many seem to accept this.

ClarasSisters · 01/04/2026 22:06

Why are you assuming it's all piled up waiting for you? Why is your assumption not that he'll do it once he's clocked off?

GriseldaandMike · 01/04/2026 22:54

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 01/04/2026 19:51

I disagree. I did realise this was what you thought from your first post.

My current dishwasher is 14 years old, it's a bog standard cheap and cheerful model and is run about 4 times a week. Not a single item has been rinsed before being put in it in all that time and it has not blocked, clogged or stopped cleaning perfectly. You really, really don't have to rinse stuff first.

SeaToSki · 01/04/2026 23:04

Does he not boil the kettle for a cup of tea all day? Does he not stop for a lunch break? It would be very easy to wash a couple of things each time he is waiting for the kettle to boil and then add the last couple of things to his lunch dishes, it would take and extra 2 mins.

I think most of the posters on here could manage a few breakfast dishes over the course of the day without breaking into their work time if WFH, and many do much much more.

GriseldaandMike · 01/04/2026 23:06

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 01/04/2026 19:51

I disagree. I did realise this was what you thought from your first post.

https://www.thespruce.com/should-you-rinse-dishes-before-dishwasher-11852502

It not just me experts agree, no rinsing necessary.

Eenameenadeeka · 02/04/2026 01:58

I don't think that you should always have to do it, it should be a shared task, but I do think you are unreasonable in regards to the question - expecting it done when you get home because he's home all day, as he's working a long day.

NarnianQueen · 02/04/2026 08:18

To be fair he probably thinks as he’s working longer hours, you can do more of the housework?

The person who works from home shouldn’t be the housekeeper by default!

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