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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

Husband calls me lazy, if I am sitting down bc of feeling unwell/tired and after a long day

120 replies

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 22:14

Hi, I am writing to consult about my marriage - I am 40, has been married for 4.5 yrs(5.5 yrs in relationship) and are parents to a 4.5yr old son. My husband constantly keeps score who does more childcare or cooking or chores and according to him he always does more and I am lazy and entitled. He routinely complains how he is exhausted bc he pulls more weight around the house. Especially, if I am feel like I am getting a cold or am pre-period,and have less energy for everything, and try to do the bare min and then just rest. When he feels tired and I feel I can take over I always tell him to just go and rest. However, when it is me who is tired, he gets angry and tells me that I need to push through and why is it him picking up the slack. We argue about it every 10 or so days and it is always him to starts complaining about doing more childcare or household jobs, often descending to yelling, name calling and escalating in front of our son. My husband typically needs less sleep than I and has been going on about me sleeping longer than him pretty much since we got together, even when I was pregnant with our son and working while he was furloughed and just lounging around.

Now we both work full time in demanding full time jobs again. My husband does morning drop-offs (I don’t drive) and we take turns with pickups, although I do twice a week, while he does three times , bc I work longer hours when I am in the office (have to be in 3 days min).

We split house chores and childcare but my husband cooks more often bc he is often more hungry and thinks about food all the time. I eat/snack less frequently and need less food in general, if I keep to his schedule I gain weight bc I overeat. Plus he is GF, is a fussier eater and does not like some of the veg or recipes I like. After a few years, I shifted cooking on him mostly esp while my son was little. I would cook for myself and my son during the day but let my husband take over dinners.

I am a high earner (banking, PE, now insurance) and always have been and worked 70-100h weeks for 10 yrs of my career pre baby, so never really ate dinner at home (stayed in the office at least until after 9 or midnight for years, so mostly ordered in the office and ate out/takeways). I am more geared towards earning vs cooking/ FT home making (plus find it boring and try to outsource as much as poss) plus my husband makes less or same money than me (he is in sales and commissions are variable). So I feel it is fair to split all the household chores.

He is an ex banker himself but had a career break during which he learned how to cook and spend time pottering around after he burnt out after 10yrs and left banking. I didn’t have a chance to do that and dont have that much time for learn how to cook elaborate meals and to simplify I made sure he does most of the cooking.

When he was growing up his mum was stay at home and did all the cooking etc so I think that he wants that from me, although I never promised to be a trad house wife. And told him that many times. After maternity leave I was made redundant and he while he supported me financially he was often angry, mean and we fought a lot. I spend my days sending out CVs instead of perfecting my Beef bourgugnion.

That being said, our house is always clean and tidy and we are both perfectionists but he likes to keep himself busy and do things (like running errands) and does not mind spending Saturdays grocery shopping and going back if forgot to get smth while I plan meticulously, write lists and try to spend as little time on chores and admin, as possible. I make sure we order groceries online at least once week instead of spending time grocery shopping on the weekend.

tonight, when I cleaned up after dinner and sat down to rest bc I didn’t sit down after coming through the door after work (having put laundry on, put away things I picked up at boots, tidied up the house etc) while he was unpacking groceries that just got delivered. I picked up a magazine and he was like “why are you sitting down, can’t u see there are groceries to unpack. And then bath and bedtime”. I said,” yes, but I am tired and it’s still 30 mins until bedtime, I need to rest”. He went on how he is tired too and how I am lazy and always try to do less than him, and that this is the reason why I am not as successful in my career, as I want to be because I am just lazy and “just don’t get it”. All I do is bitch about my job and just not do enough at home, at work and, in general, in life. he also went on to say that this is why his parents don’t like me and think that I am lazy and entitled (they are better off than I or my parents ever been and haven’t had to as work hard, all family money/generational wealth).

I am incredibly offended and hurt, especially bc this is repeat behaviour and pretty much the only reason we argue - bc I am not this and not that and in general sleep too long, cook too little and like to lounge around instead of waking up early on the weekend and running around being busy all the time

tonight has really escalated after I said I am simply too tired and needed rest and can not help him with groceries and he should back off. I was particularly offended bc I spent most of the weekend on doing a diy project while he went to play tennis and was feeling tired so was lounging around the house. I both cooked and cleaned up dinner last night after spending 6 h each day restoring/painting a piece of furniture that needed a make over. Today he worked from home while I shlepped into the office in the city.
it ended up with him calling me names and even a whore in front of my son when I kept telling him to just stop arguing and leave me alone. He gets agitated fast and we argue bc he is upset/angry at me for some reason 95% out of 100%. I am not perfect but I believe in civilised conflict resolution and don’t bring up his character traits or flaws or whatever and am mostly content / accept him for what he is and do not criticise him. If I did, we would argue all the time. Bc god forbid someone says smth about him. He is uber sensitive and defensive.

not sure what to do, but just needed to share. I feel this is wrong and he is always mean/hurtful and cusses/says thing he apologises for after, but this is just not acceptable

I have been depressed after redundancy and have been struggling ever since - I feel he drains me and my energy and my happy self is not me anymore

sometimes it works for a while and he is loving and caring and gentle. But inevitably it becomes too much for him and he blows up bc I am too negative/ too tired/ sleep too much/ do too little and don’t look after him as much as he does after me and our son

OP posts:
SouthernFashionista · 12/01/2026 22:18

I’m very sorry to read this.

What is your husband bringing to your life? Do you love him? Can you envisage living without him? Do you think you deserve this abuse? I certainly don’t. You sound like a smart, capable and astute woman. He sounds like an insecure immature child. It’s ok to leave him. Sounds like you will be a lot happier and more relaxed without him. Sending you love and strength.

Thebigfellaisnowsnoozing · 12/01/2026 22:19

You need to end the relationship..
Or your ds will grow up thinking this is what relationships look like.
Decent relationships are not how you described yours..
Your dh is a prize cunt...

FuzzyWolf · 12/01/2026 22:25

What an unhappy sounding environment. You don’t sound compatible.

CurlyhairedAssassin · 12/01/2026 22:36

From the way you write I’m sensing some culitural influences on your relationship? Do you have any support from your own family?

GentleSheep · 12/01/2026 22:41

After reading through that I have to ask, does he actually love you? Because he isn't acting that way at all. He isn't considerate of your needs. He sounds mentally abusive. Do you have any support from family/friends (although it can be difficult to confide that one's marriage isn't as rosy as they may imagine)?

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 22:45

thank you for your messages. Deep down I know it is not healthy for my son and have tried to shield him as much as possible. My husband, however, always argues in front of him saying that we don’t have time otherwise bc it’s full on with childcare but I think it is just lack of self regulation and discipline. I told him over and over again, how damaging it is for our son to witness his blow ups, but I am no saint either. When my husband escalates he typically does not let go/ leave me alone until I yell back which sometimes take 45min to an hour of trying to deflect him/ talk him down. However, unless I offend him back and yell back he would not back off. He follows me around the house and tells me that am in the wrong and need to admit my fault and then we make up/act as a united front for our son sake.

I have stuck with him bc of my son who loves us both dearly and a divorce would disrupt his otherwise happy world. My husband is a great dad and spends a lot of time with my son (to the extent that I sometimes wish he worked more and I could spend more time one on one with my son instead of always having family time/ ie my husband being around and our son playing us against each other). We are a fine family and good to our son but our relationship started to detiriorate when my son was 4 months old and didn’t sleep. We fought like crazy for two years through 2 unemployments (first my husband after lockdown while I was on may leave and then during my redundancy). After I started working again the relationship got a lot better but he still keeps score and we always argue if I am less resilient to his poking and snap back. It topically leads to blowups like tonight

i spent significant amount of savings while looking for a job and earn less than I used too (work fewer hours too), so would not be able to afford and provide my son with the same lifestyle on my own. He is in private school and I would like him to stay there.

I don’t have a property I could move out to and
am a foreigner and English is not my first language. I acquired citizenship 7yrs ago but have no family in the uk and little support network/close friends who could really help in such a circumstance.

OP posts:
adviceneeded1990 · 12/01/2026 22:45

D

Andthatrightsoon · 12/01/2026 22:50

You are a long way from being 'a fine family and good to our son'. It's a hideous, toxic mess and he is being damaged.

WhattheFudgeareyouonabout · 12/01/2026 22:52

“accept him for what he is and do not criticise him.”

This is half your problem. You accept his shitty derogatory behaviour. The other half of your problem is that you’ve married an absolute prick.

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 22:52

He is Canadian British and I am Russian British, my family is in Moscow and given the ongoing war they can’t come over easily. I have no intention of going back, as I have spent equal time here and there and am opposed to the regime. but building a life I would like here proved more difficult than I thought after I got tangled up in this relationship.

OP posts:
margegunderson · 12/01/2026 22:56

Good god. Leave.

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 22:58

WhattheFudgeareyouonabout · 12/01/2026 22:52

“accept him for what he is and do not criticise him.”

This is half your problem. You accept his shitty derogatory behaviour. The other half of your problem is that you’ve married an absolute prick.

I don’t accept his behaviour towards me, i stand up for myself and hence we argue. Bc to me it is not acceptable. But he attacks and attacks the longer I keep my cool.

“By not criticising” I mean that don’t poke at him and highlight his shortcomings etc unless he initiates a conflict. Sometimes I am able to deflect but more often then not it ends in a fight or I leave the house to go for a walk bc he is not able to stop and that’s the only way to escape his escapades

then for 10-15 days he is a loving husband

OP posts:
SkinnyOatFlatWhiteForMePlease · 12/01/2026 22:59

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 22:45

thank you for your messages. Deep down I know it is not healthy for my son and have tried to shield him as much as possible. My husband, however, always argues in front of him saying that we don’t have time otherwise bc it’s full on with childcare but I think it is just lack of self regulation and discipline. I told him over and over again, how damaging it is for our son to witness his blow ups, but I am no saint either. When my husband escalates he typically does not let go/ leave me alone until I yell back which sometimes take 45min to an hour of trying to deflect him/ talk him down. However, unless I offend him back and yell back he would not back off. He follows me around the house and tells me that am in the wrong and need to admit my fault and then we make up/act as a united front for our son sake.

I have stuck with him bc of my son who loves us both dearly and a divorce would disrupt his otherwise happy world. My husband is a great dad and spends a lot of time with my son (to the extent that I sometimes wish he worked more and I could spend more time one on one with my son instead of always having family time/ ie my husband being around and our son playing us against each other). We are a fine family and good to our son but our relationship started to detiriorate when my son was 4 months old and didn’t sleep. We fought like crazy for two years through 2 unemployments (first my husband after lockdown while I was on may leave and then during my redundancy). After I started working again the relationship got a lot better but he still keeps score and we always argue if I am less resilient to his poking and snap back. It topically leads to blowups like tonight

i spent significant amount of savings while looking for a job and earn less than I used too (work fewer hours too), so would not be able to afford and provide my son with the same lifestyle on my own. He is in private school and I would like him to stay there.

I don’t have a property I could move out to and
am a foreigner and English is not my first language. I acquired citizenship 7yrs ago but have no family in the uk and little support network/close friends who could really help in such a circumstance.

Edited

Your sons is not living in any version of a happy world, he is witnessing the toxic hell test is his parents marriage frequently. I do not say this lightly, divorce would be better all round.

Whattodo2024 · 12/01/2026 23:00

I’d ditch the private school and have my son grow up in an environment where his mother isn’t called a whore In front of him.

parietal · 12/01/2026 23:02

this is not a sustainable happy marriage. the arguments and the disrespect and the shouting will damage you and damage your son.

start planning your exit. do you have savings? would you be able to rent a flat in the area where you live? would you be able to hire an after-school nanny to pick up your child from school and do evening childcare? If not, start a secret savings account asap.

even if you have to keep quiet for 6 months and save and plan before you leave this mess of a marriage, you need to work towards leaving.

SwallowsandAmazonians · 12/01/2026 23:02

Oh no, I'm sorry. I would never stay with someone who talked like that to me. I appreciate you've been through some difficult times and it's not just all on him but that's not an excuse.

FrodoBiggins · 12/01/2026 23:05

Whattodo2024 · 12/01/2026 23:00

I’d ditch the private school and have my son grow up in an environment where his mother isn’t called a whore In front of him.

This, sorry. I'm afraid I can't agree that he's a good father if he would do this.

How long were you together when you got pregnant? He sounds awful OP, I'm sad for you.

helplessbanana · 12/01/2026 23:08

Your son is living a nightmare.

For his sake, you have to end this appalling, toxic relationship. Oh and by the way, your husband's constant nastiness and having ago at you endlessly until you finally blow up and have a go back? That is a classic abuser's tactic.

You earn well. For crying out loud, spend some of it and get your child away from this awful man.

dotdotdotdash · 12/01/2026 23:11

Oh I’m so sorry. I thought you might be arguing over competitive tiredness which happens with parents of small children who are both exhausted. Then I saw you say he called you a whore and deliberately prolongs arguments in front of your child and thought no; you should probably begin to think about leaving him.

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 23:12

parietal · 12/01/2026 23:02

this is not a sustainable happy marriage. the arguments and the disrespect and the shouting will damage you and damage your son.

start planning your exit. do you have savings? would you be able to rent a flat in the area where you live? would you be able to hire an after-school nanny to pick up your child from school and do evening childcare? If not, start a secret savings account asap.

even if you have to keep quiet for 6 months and save and plan before you leave this mess of a marriage, you need to work towards leaving.

I would but my husband would never let me have full custody, he said it many times, he will fight tooth and nail for our son, and I am not sure that leaving between two households would be beneficial for DS. I also think that coparenting would also be just as painful as DH is a piece of work (and his family for that matter plus they have considerable funds to fight me in court if need be)
we had a nanny (plus nursery) while I was working and he was preschool) and I always thought that it would be better if I were more involved vs working more and make more money while outsourcing his care to a nanny. Now if we separate I will have to take on more work or go back to ibanking which 1) is not very compatible with having a child 2) I may not be able to do bc it is so competitive and I moved into an inhouse role

OP posts:
JadeOtter · 12/01/2026 23:13

This reply has been withdrawn

Withdrawn due to privacy concerns.

helplessbanana · 12/01/2026 23:15

AlexWinter · 12/01/2026 23:12

I would but my husband would never let me have full custody, he said it many times, he will fight tooth and nail for our son, and I am not sure that leaving between two households would be beneficial for DS. I also think that coparenting would also be just as painful as DH is a piece of work (and his family for that matter plus they have considerable funds to fight me in court if need be)
we had a nanny (plus nursery) while I was working and he was preschool) and I always thought that it would be better if I were more involved vs working more and make more money while outsourcing his care to a nanny. Now if we separate I will have to take on more work or go back to ibanking which 1) is not very compatible with having a child 2) I may not be able to do bc it is so competitive and I moved into an inhouse role

Oh well, just let your child carry on living in a toxic, abusive home all the time then.

SugarandSpiceandAllThingsNaice · 12/01/2026 23:17

Normally, I’d say leave as this is a toxic relationship with him verbally and emotionally abusing you. But I see that you are kind of in denial about this and wish to try and salvage the relationship. You don’t want to give up on him for the sake of your son as their relationship is so far ok.

Given this, I suggest you get counselling for you and tell him to get counselling as well to address the constant fighting, but do NOT get couples counselling. You both need your own therapist. If he refuses (very likely), you still get your own therapist. The therapist is going to help you open your eyes to the abuse that is happening to you and will be able to give you ways to cope with it, and how to take steps to get away from him. Abused women attempt on average 4 times to leave an abusive partner before they succeed. So your feelings and reluctance are totally normal. You want to feel that you didn’t fail in some way. It’s hard to get to that place, when every day you’re being told you are a failure of a partner and mother. You need that 3rd person, a therapist who you can tell everything to in order to give you some much needed perspective and to boost your confidence…you’re a professional high earner…you can stand on your own two feet and raise your son without him. I know you don’t believe that now, but you will.

I would prepare for a divorce- download copies of account statements, pension pot amounts, ensure you have bank account in your name and put aside some of your money in there so you have a fund. You need a Plan in case he doesn’t change- which is honestly the most likely scenario imho.

Your son isn’t in a happy family witnessing all these fights in which your husband completely tears you down and accuses you of the worst. Your son is going to absorb what his says and think you are lazy, you are this and that. He is alienating your kid from you.

Soonenough · 12/01/2026 23:17

He called you a whore in front of your son . Unforgivable . Unless you are both willing to seek some sort of marriage counselling, you are much better off on your own .

Alltheyellowbirds · 12/01/2026 23:20

He called you a whore????

Your own husband called you a whore. Please have a think about that x