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Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Fed up of lazy entitled husband

83 replies

Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:02

Just as the title says.

I really feel like I'm going to run myself into the ground and have a breakdown or end up really unwell. I've got a constant sore throat, constant head ache and I'm always tired and snappy.

Me and my husband have been together around 19 years. When we met we were both in college so we were 17 and 18. He ended up doing an apprenticeship and then got the job he's in now and has worked his way up the ranks. I went to uni, had our first child straight out of uni. Unplanned but due to how long we had been together we knew we could make it work. As a result I've never used my degree and have worked jobs around the family. At first I worked 12 hours at a weekend whilst he worked full time in the week so someone was always at home with our child. I did all the housework at this time as it was only fair as I was home during the week.

Then when DC1 started school I changed job and worked 18 hours a week, a mix of days and a weekend day. Again, I did all of the housework as I was only part time, other than the dishes, bins and cat tray which DH did (and still does) plus he dropped DC1 off at granny's house 2 mornings a week so she could take DC to school as our start times didn't allow us do to this.

I was quite happy with this set up the bulk of the time. We had another child whilst in this situation who slotted in so well.

Then the pandemic hit and I needed to change jobs as my role became impossible to do with two young kids, the start times and finish times as well as teaching at home. Plus they couldn't promise my role would go back to how it was after covid finished.

I have now been in my job for almost 2 years. I do 25 hours a week one week over 2 and a half days. The long days are 11 hours, 10 hours and then a 5 hour day. I get an unpaid lunch break on the long days. The second week I do 30 hours a week over 3 long days. I start at 8am and there are no busses from where we live at this time. So I have to walk 45 to 50 mins to the nearest bus then there is a 25-30 min bus ride to my work location. So I'm leaving my home at 6.20 in the morning. I'm not able to drive at the moment due to a health condition, haven't been able to for some time. DH works 36 hours a week from home and the kids are 8 and 15.

I don’t have time for in housework on my work days so I do it all on my days off. Our house isn't a tiny house either, I have a downstairs toilet room, an upstairs family bathroom and 2 en suits to clean. Then the kitchen. Then the dining room. Then the study. Then the 3 bedrooms plus changing 2 double beds and a single. All the hovering, mopping tiled floors and dusting. The meal planning, the food shopping. I chop and prep all the evening meals the night before and store it in the fridge and load the slow cooker before work. I make the lunches the night before. I have to do all the washing, drying and ironing. Im also the one who deals with the general admin, such as knowing when prescriptions are due, opticians, when the cat needs the vets, who has what school trips etc on what days, who needs more clothes / shoes and sorting that out. I'm often not in bed before 11pm at night. Then my alarm goes at 5am and it starts all again.

This is where it is starting to really frustrate and piss me off. DH is still maintaining that I'm not full time and should be doing the bulk of the house work. He feels the dishes, bins, cat tray and taking kids to school is enough. Especially as he brings home 4 x my salary which allows us to have a nice lifestyle (holiday abroad each year, detached house. Not excessive my any means.

I've tried to explain this was fine when I was on 12 hours and then 18 hours a week but not when I'm on 25-30 hours. Yes I know it's not full time but with the commute and the wake up times etc it's pretty damn close. I've asked and asked, begged, pleaded for more help. He does for about a week and then it slips back. The kids don't help and DH says as they are kids they shouldn't have to.

Everyone is saying they are excited for another bank holiday weekend. I'm just thinking how am I going to get everything done and get some adequate rest.

I am almost at breaking point and I just don't know what to do anymore.

OP posts:
cpphelp · 06/05/2023 08:17
  1. a 15yr old can clean their own room and en-suite, do their own washing, change a double bed, and make their own lunches. 15yr old could help 8yr old make their lunches too?
  2. don't clean a study that you don't use - that's husbands job.
  3. could you afford gusto boxes? We have two delivered a week for a family of 5, so no meal planning at all.
  4. all shopping is delivered.
  5. prescriptions via the Lloyds pharmacy app which will give you a notification when prescriptions are running out - a few clicks on the app, and they are delivered through your door.
  6. shared calendar with your husband over everything to do with cat at vets, school trips etc.
rookiemere · 06/05/2023 08:19

Can you get a cleaner ?

IHateFlies · 06/05/2023 08:19

What's he doing over the bank holiday while you run yourself into the ground? Or on a daily basis? Just sits there and watches you when he could take on some chores too?

He needs to step up. Have you shown him the list of everything you do? Have you compared the hrs you both work together with the hrs you both put in with housework and added it all up? Maybe that's easier for him to understand when your total for the week comes to 110 and his is 41?

If he won't, then you need to start doing less or get a cleaner.

NotmykingEatCake · 06/05/2023 08:20

Why the hell doesn't this man who is supposed to love you drive you to the bus stop?

cpphelp · 06/05/2023 08:21

Also, RE bank holiday weekend - "I'm excited too, I've planned XYZ for myself all day Saturday and half of Sunday". Hope you all have a good one too!

Ignore husband saying kids shouldn't do anything, that's not raising them right. My husband did nothing around the house and lived with his mum until he was 30. In the first person other than his family he's ever lived with and it SHOWED! He's a lot better now, but because I won't stand for it - I'm a SAHM and the kids are in nursery 3 days a week

Patchworksack · 06/05/2023 08:21

With travel time you are doing at least as many hours as him and the kids are old enough to take on some chores. Family meeting, detail everything that needs doing - decide if any can be outsourced and the rest divided up.

cpphelp · 06/05/2023 08:22

I also really hope you are not making his lunch for him to work from home!!!!!

Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:23

cpphelp · 06/05/2023 08:17

  1. a 15yr old can clean their own room and en-suite, do their own washing, change a double bed, and make their own lunches. 15yr old could help 8yr old make their lunches too?
  2. don't clean a study that you don't use - that's husbands job.
  3. could you afford gusto boxes? We have two delivered a week for a family of 5, so no meal planning at all.
  4. all shopping is delivered.
  5. prescriptions via the Lloyds pharmacy app which will give you a notification when prescriptions are running out - a few clicks on the app, and they are delivered through your door.
  6. shared calendar with your husband over everything to do with cat at vets, school trips etc.

A few of these are things we've tried, calendars etc but it gets ignored. Tried gusto boxes but because he actually has to cook after a day at work he moans which is why we do the slow cooker.

I've tried the online pharmacy before but due to the meds that one of us require if it was even slightly late it could have serious consequences and I don't have time to be chasing our GP surgery for a new prescription to be sent to a local pharmacy.

I'll try to get the 15 year old on board though. I know they have exams but it's not too long till they will be off at uni so could try and make it life skills for them.

OP posts:
Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:25

rookiemere · 06/05/2023 08:19

Can you get a cleaner ?

Possibly. But he doesn't like the thought of someone in the house while he's working due to the nature of his job and the info they may overhear. I could encourage him to go the office one or days a week and get them to come then

OP posts:
Strugglingtodomybest · 06/05/2023 08:25

Tried gusto boxes but because he actually has to cook after a day at work he moans which is why we do the slow cooker.

What would happen if you just let him moan?

He sounds like one of my teenagers! He moans everytime I ask him to do something, but he still has to do it. I'm hoping that one day he'll understand that the moaning doesn't get him anywhere.

crossstitchingnana · 06/05/2023 08:26

"Kids shouldn't have to help" what a load of bollocks. Seems that for your dh a woman's place is in the kitchen. Wonder if his mum did everything for his family when growing up? Guessing so.

Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:27

IHateFlies · 06/05/2023 08:19

What's he doing over the bank holiday while you run yourself into the ground? Or on a daily basis? Just sits there and watches you when he could take on some chores too?

He needs to step up. Have you shown him the list of everything you do? Have you compared the hrs you both work together with the hrs you both put in with housework and added it all up? Maybe that's easier for him to understand when your total for the week comes to 110 and his is 41?

If he won't, then you need to start doing less or get a cleaner.

Football, racing and a night out with friends. Whilst I've been up since 6am with more laundry and taking the youngest to their sports club shortly which will take up the majority of the day. Then tomorrow we have a school project to finish.

I think, sadly, he doesn't see the domestic jobs as actual work. He doesn't think all the housework will add up to his extra working hours.

OP posts:
rookiemere · 06/05/2023 08:27

@Fedupandtiredmum getting him back into the office a couple of days a week would also be a good thing. Let him have to commute and see what it feels like.

Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:28

NotmykingEatCake · 06/05/2023 08:20

Why the hell doesn't this man who is supposed to love you drive you to the bus stop?

Apparently it doesn't fit in with his morning routine and getting the kids up and ready and out the door. They would have to be up earlier and in the car with him incase traffic was bad and he was late back to them to get them to school Confused

OP posts:
Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:29

cpphelp · 06/05/2023 08:22

I also really hope you are not making his lunch for him to work from home!!!!!

No I'm not. But I often get messages asking what there is for lunch. I tell him to look in the cupboard or fridge

OP posts:
Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:29

crossstitchingnana · 06/05/2023 08:26

"Kids shouldn't have to help" what a load of bollocks. Seems that for your dh a woman's place is in the kitchen. Wonder if his mum did everything for his family when growing up? Guessing so.

She did. And still does even though she still works full time and FIL is retired

OP posts:
Strugglingtodomybest · 06/05/2023 08:30

Wow, it really is all about him isn't it? You are just a skivvy to facilitate his life. On reading your updates, I'd be considering leaving him for a while to cope by himself and see how he likes/copes with that.

Fedupandtiredmum · 06/05/2023 08:32

I've tried not doing anything at all before (other than for the 8 year old who is clearly too young to fend for themselves). Ended up having to play catch up which was hell. Never again

OP posts:
IHateFlies · 06/05/2023 08:34

He's just a selfish arse who's prioritising his own work and leisure at the expense of yours. You're just a skivvy.
Kids not doing anything does no favours for anyone.
Tell him to shape up or just get a cleaner. Ignore his moaning and stand up for yourself.

comfyslippets · 06/05/2023 08:38

Your husband is the problem. It's as simple as that. People can give you hints and tips all they like to make your life easier but it won't make any difference because it's your husband that's the problem and you're resentful. At some point you'll end up hating him. I left my husband last year for exactly the same reason and, I tell you now, I will never ever be somebody's maid ever again. I've never been happier.

CBG34 · 06/05/2023 08:39

NotmykingEatCake · 06/05/2023 08:20

Why the hell doesn't this man who is supposed to love you drive you to the bus stop?

My thoughts exactly!

YukoandHiro · 06/05/2023 08:44

Get a cleaner. If DH earns 4x what you do and isn't willing to pull his weight then your rest is more important than the additional cash in the bank.

Lwrenagain · 06/05/2023 08:47

What is the point in a beautiful home and holidays etc if you're too run ragged to enjoy anything?

I am in awe you've coped this long but I'd be looking at leaving over this, life is too short.

I know it sounds dramatic but you sound so undervalued it's actually really sad to read.

Hes a crap husband, money aside, your life sounds quite joyless and you don't want to be stuck in this rut forever.

Tinkerbyebye · 06/05/2023 08:48

He’s not on full time at 36 hours a week. Point that out

YukoandHiro · 06/05/2023 08:49

People always post this but get him to read it

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/she-divorced-me-i-left-dishes-by-the-sinkbb_9055288/amp

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