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Parenting

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I hate my husband after having a child

34 replies

Mum2Bel · 24/04/2025 23:00

My husband (40) and I (39) had a brilliant relationship before we had our daughter (6mo) - I was convinced I had met someone who would be the best dad - thoughtful, kind and giving. During my pregnancy and birth, and the few weeks after, he was amazing, but things changed once he returned to work, and now I cannot stand him.

I do almost everything when it comes to our daughter - I do the night times; I put her down for naps; I feed her; I clean her clothes; I bought all her toys and clothes, furniture, signed her up for classes; I chose the nursery she will go to in September… I could go on. I mean I even organised the stuff for weaning.

I do all of this because I love her and want the best for her - plus, I am not working, and she is exclusively breastfed, but I just feel (most of the time) like a single parent.

He does try, but he just doesn’t ’get it’ - he seems to have no instinct. He helps financially and when he isn’t working he will split the time with me, but even then he isn’t really present. For example, he is with her, but on his phone. There is no thought behind what he is doing. Also, if I ask him to help, for example with getting her down to sleep, he tries, but she won’t go down for him. As I can hear him getting annoyed and it stresses me out, I always step in to avoid hearing her in misery or having him in a shitty mood after. I have asked him repeatedly to try to give her a bottle and he just doesn’t do it… unless I initiate it and prep it all.

I have tried talking to him about this, and at first he seems receptive - and things change for a bit - but then it all reverts back to as it was before.

Do most mums feel this way? Will things get better? I am honestly thinking of divorce, but most people say not to do anything in the first year.

OP posts:
MsCactus · 25/04/2025 15:54

Mum2Bel · 25/04/2025 13:05

Wow - I’m so sorry. But I get it. It really resonated with me when you said ‘Parenting really reveals parts of each other you never knew about previously, upbringing, demons, belief systems, good and bad habits.’ I have discovered things about him that are so disappointing - things that I would never have known had we not had a child together. I thought I knew him so well.

You also said ‘I don't think true equality exists in motherhood and maybe that's the issue. We were sold a dream that never existed and now we're angry’ - and I 100% agree. I almost feel stupid for thinking my experience would be different.

"I don't think true equality exists in motherhood"

I'm not sure if this is true. Me and DH are 50/50 parents. We split parental leave and mainly bottle fed, so he did just as much as me the first year. I'm also bedbound at the end of pregnancy atm so he is doing all the childcare for our DC, I've got numerous risk factors with this pregnancy so I genuinely can't do anything with our other kids.

I do agree that obviously with breastfeeding and pregnancy that bit can't be equal - but I don't agree that parenthood overall can't be equal. I do think splitting parental leave is a big factor tho, because imo your DP hasn't learnt how to solo parent and needs more practice to get confident at it.

minipie · 25/04/2025 16:12

Is it possible for him to take some shared parental leave after you go back to work OP?

We had the same dynamic and whilst it annoyed me on mat leave it REALLY infuriated me after I’d gone back to work and yet all this stuff was STILL my job. It was IMO because he’d never had a period of sole charge where he had to work out how to do it for himself.

I would very strongly suggest your DH takes a month of parental leave sole charge. Or else this is just going to continue.

For now, suggest you carve out periods at the weekends in between breastfeeds where he is in sole charge. This will get easier as your LO weans.

SilverButton · 25/04/2025 18:06

minipie · 25/04/2025 16:12

Is it possible for him to take some shared parental leave after you go back to work OP?

We had the same dynamic and whilst it annoyed me on mat leave it REALLY infuriated me after I’d gone back to work and yet all this stuff was STILL my job. It was IMO because he’d never had a period of sole charge where he had to work out how to do it for himself.

I would very strongly suggest your DH takes a month of parental leave sole charge. Or else this is just going to continue.

For now, suggest you carve out periods at the weekends in between breastfeeds where he is in sole charge. This will get easier as your LO weans.

This is a great suggestion.

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Keepgettingolder81 · 25/04/2025 18:12

I think that’s pretty normal.

When the children were babies and toddlers, he was really nice and helpful, however could not cope! And I led the show.

Now they are teenagers, and quite often obnoxious and horrible! He is all over it, he’s really good at life talks, sorting out histrionics, and managing when they are rude and horrible!
He also does lots of the sports club running around, and picking up late. Stuff which I really do not enjoy.

I think it is a balance of strength and weaknesses.

AmusedGoose · 25/04/2025 18:47

You sound a bit controlling. Leave baby alone with him for short periods of time. It sounds like you don't trust him which isn't nice for him. He deserves to bond with baby andvlearnntondo things his own way.

Maxi77 · 25/04/2025 19:04

Sorry you are having a hard time. Caring for a young baby is relentless and exhausting (but also amazing). I'm in quite a similar situation, although my DH is taking more of an active role now and has lots of interaction with baby when he is home. However I still do the bulk of baby care even on weekends. I agree that the most frustrating part is the lack of initiative and having to ask them to do certain things. A few small things that have helped me are:

  1. Letting DH care for baby alone, even just for 30 mins. I go off to exercise and leave them to it. I know baby is fed and happy, and DH can call me in an emergency. I'm trying to make this a regular thing.
  2. Making sure he attends any medical type appointments.
  3. Asking when I need help/being direct. While I hate that he doesn't think about it himself, he will usually help out once I've asked.
  4. Knowing that things will get better. While I doubt it will be 50-50 for a long time, DH can take on more responsibility when baby is weaned.
WizardOfAus · 03/05/2025 06:34

As mentioned by PP, I ordered the book - How Not to Hate Your Husband After Kids after seeing this book review on facebook….

—-

I read Jancee Dunn's book the night after I'd hidden in the bathroom, silently sobbing into a towel so I wouldn't wake the baby—or my husband, who was sleeping through his third consecutive night shift that I was somehow pulling alone, despite us both working full-time. I wasn't crying from exhaustion. I was crying because I had just calculated how much child support he'd have to pay if I left him.

This isn't a book. It's a goddamn mirror reflecting the darkest thoughts of every mother who's ever fantasized about abandoning her family at 3AM, not because she doesn't love them, but because she's drowning and her partner is standing on the shore checking his phone.

  1. The Maternal Rage You Feel Isn't Mental Illness—It's Mathematics
Dunn ruthlessly quantifies what most parenting books politely ignore: the raw numerical inequality of modern parenthood. When she tracks hours spent on childcare (her: 35 weekly, him: 9) while both work full-time, it's not anecdotal—it's violence. The liberation comes in recognizing your homicidal thoughts aren't hormonal or "crazy"—they're the rational response to systemic theft of your time, sleep, and identity while someone who claims to love you watches from the sidelines.
  1. The "Mental Load" Isn't Just Unfair—It's Killing You Cell by Cell
What devastated me wasn't just Dunn's account of doing everything—it was her scientific exploration of what invisible labor does to a woman's brain and body. The constant vigilance of tracking every family need doesn't just make you tired—it restructures neural pathways, elevates cortisol, and accelerates aging. When her doctor finds her blood pressure dangerously high while her husband's remains perfect despite their supposedly "shared" stress, the physiological consequences of inequality are laid bare. You're not imagining it—this imbalance is literally shortening your life.
  1. Your Husband Isn't Just Annoying—He's Been Systematically Trained to Disable You
The book's most chilling insight comes when Dunn investigates how her competent, intelligent husband develops "strategic incompetence" around domestic tasks. Her research reveals it's not accidental—it's subconscious warfare honed through generations of male socialization. The weaponized helplessness ("Where does this go?"), the learned blindness to mess, the performance of bumbling assistance—these aren't personality quirks but sophisticated tactics to maintain privilege while appearing supportive. I'll never hear "just tell me what needs done" the same way again.
  1. The Fights You're Having Aren't About Chores—They're About Human Worth
Dunn's epiphany comes not in cataloging tasks but in recognizing the existential question beneath them: whose time and peace matter? When her husband unthinkingly preserves his exercise routine while she hasn't showered in days, when he sleeps through night wakings because he "has work" (as though she doesn't), when he requires praise for basic parenting—the underlying message is that his humanity outranks hers. This reframing transformed how I understood my own marriage's breaking points.
  1. You're Not Control-Freaking—You're Preventing Catastrophe
The section that left me breathless was Dunn's dissection of "maternal gatekeeping." Her therapist suggests she's "not letting go" of child-rearing tasks—until she documents the actual consequences of her husband's cavalier parenting: a toddler left in soiled clothes for hours, forgotten medications, a child nearly hit by a car while dad texts. The gut-punch: sometimes the "perfectionist mom" narrative masks legitimate terror of what happens when the backup system fails. I've never felt more vindicated about my inability to "just relax."
  1. Romance After Children Requires Blood Sacrifice—Usually Yours
Dunn's unflinching examination of post-baby intimacy problems goes beyond fatigue to something darker: the resentment poisoning attraction. Her account of faking interest while mentally calculating how many hours of sleep she's losing made me physically flinch with recognition. The breakthrough comes not through date nights or lingerie but through radical redistribution of invisible labor. Her documentation of how performing oral sex feels easier than asking for help with dishes exposes how parenthood turns sex into another form of female emotional labor.
  1. The Solutions Aren't Cute—They're Nuclear
What elevates this beyond primal-scream therapy is Dunn's scorched-earth approach to reconstruction. She brings in hostage negotiators. Corporate efficiency experts. Therapists who specialize in high-conflict divorce. The message is clear: half-measures will fail. Her implementation of NASA's black box system for critical communication during arguments saved not just her marriage but possibly her husband's life. This isn't about better chore charts—it's about dismantling and rebuilding the entire operational system of your relationship.

This book should be handed to every couple in the delivery room, not as celebration but as warning. Dunn doesn't offer gentle suggestions for reconnecting with your spouse—she offers battlefield triage for the psychological trauma that parenthood inflicts on females and marriages.

JG24 · 03/05/2025 07:02

If you can afford it have you thought about him taking a month or more shared parental leave whisk tyouneither go back to work or just do something out for the house, a full time class for instance to upskill work wise (if you're not planning to go back to work straight after maternity)
Then he'd be the default primary parent
I thinkt he reason my partner and I work so well is down to shared parental leave, we both had a solid amount of time being the primary carer

lilydragon · 03/05/2025 09:12

It’s definitely not uncommon to feel this way and I would give it some time as he doesn’t sounds completely useless but as
others have said, just step back and let him deal with it without intervening, as hard as this is at first, don’t give him the option to opt out. Agree with the suggestion to go away for the weekend and leave him to it. Also, try not to split everything 50:50 (as it rarely works) but focus on the things you’re both good at/enjoy more. For us, we split parenting 50:50 overall (maybe DH does a bit more as my job is more demanding) but I do 100% of the ‘mental load’ (buying baby and kids stuff, choosing their clothes each day, organising childcare, play dates and classes, booking and keeping track of medical and other appointments etc), DH does most of the cooking, DH did more night feeds than me especially with the second one as I struggled more with the lack of sleep than he did, he does more baths and nappy changes, and I do more mealtimes etc. as the kids eat better for me. It’s about finding an equal balance while not necessarily splitting every task equally if that makes sense.

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