🐱 I Resent That My Husband Does The Laundry

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My husband does the laundry. No one asks him to, and often no one thanks him for doing it. But somehow, every week, our clothes, our kids’ clothes, the towels, the sheets; they all get cleaned. And with each load, the jealousy grows.


Throwing the piles into the washing machine is definitely the easy part. From there, he sorts them into mounds of hang-dry vs. dryer items, hangs the clothes, foldsthe towels and clothes, and puts the fresh sheets on the beds.

A couple of times per week, I walk into our bedroom to find a tidy little pile of my clothes. They are folded with tenderness, neatly stacked, and grouped by category. I know he would put them away, too, if only he knew where they went.

That is not even close to all he does around the house either. He’s the dishwasher, the grocery collector, the garbage remover, and the maintenance man. He follows behind us all, picking up the thrown socks, crumbs, and toys, somehow managing to maintain some sort of order within the chaos.


This is not to say that he doesn’t spend time with our children. He is the definition of a hands-on dad. There are nightly horsey rides, weekend swimming lessons, and stories before bed.

I know that I am lucky to have him, he is a saint — but does he know how lucky he is?

Fighting for Freedom​

My husband works a pretty flexible job, for which he gets to leave the house. In the morning, he takes his time in the shower, cuts his nails, trims his facial hair, and brushes his teeth. He ventures out into the world when it works for him, taking in the fresh air, talking to someone other than me, and focusing on things that don’t involve our family. Sometimes he meets a friend for a socially distanced coffee. He often returns with a spring in his step, a spring that hasn’t been in my step for months. No wonder he has the energy to do the laundry.


To me, this sounds like a fairy tale. I don’t leave the house: it’s not safe with an infant during a pandemic. Showers and personal hygiene are not daily occurrences, and when they do happen, it’s rushed and with at least one child at my feet. Some days I don’t brush my teeth at all.

The point is, most days, I would do anything to be able to check out, know the kids were in good hands, and do some serious cleaning. Throwing in the earbuds to mindlessly complete some mundane tasks actually sounds like a mini vacation.

Throughout the week, my husband has the freedom to escape from the ruckus. I resent that he can walk away, head downstairs, or off to work and take that vacation. These breaks do not come easily for mothers. There is no freedom. Even when the kids are napping, there’s a monitor to keep an eye on while I quickly change into my daytime sweatpants and throw my hair up in a bun.


Differing Agendas​

Sometimes the issue isn’t even that he gets to complete these chores, it’s when he completes these chores.

I get frustrated that he feels the need to tidy the kitchen instead of sitting down the second dinner is ready. He sees the pile of pots and pans that need washing; I see the timer on my temporarily calm toddler ticking down. I don’t understand the need to fold the towels when we are late to get the kids in the bath; he doesn’t understand why getting into the bath a few minutes behind schedule is such a big deal, but having the towels folded and put away is essential.

Problem Solving​

What I’ve realized is that men are problem solvers. Have you ever unloaded an elaborate story of the ignorance of a friend or co-worker just to have your partner say, “Why don’t you just stop spending time with her?” He thinks that you’ve presented a problem, and he’s fixed it, why are you not patting him on the back? When in reality, all you wanted was for him to acknowledge that you were justified in feeling annoyed. So you can move on.


He sees the laundry, the dishes, and the garbage as the problem. And he knows the solution. So what better time to correct the situation than right now! Mr. Fix-It is on the job, often without realizing how significantly they are cramping our style. Or that we may, in fact, cherish a few moments away to complete the job ourselves.

It is my choice to always be present with my children. I am the one who maintains the calm, kisses and bandages, owies, makes memorable moments, and bakes cookies on Sunday mornings. But behind the scenes, he’s the one holding our household together. Yes, he gets to take a respite from the kids, but it is a necessary evil. I know that I could not be the mother I want to be if he wasn’t the husband and father he is. But it is still hard not to hold it against him.


The next time he insists on emptying the dishwasher while one kid is crying and the other is spinning like a destructive tornado around the living room, I’m going to try to remind myself that we are both doing the best we can for our family.

Whatever happens during the week, I can count on crawling into our clean, neatly tucked sheets on Sunday nights and know that I am loved.
 
On one hand I want to tell her to just do the laundry before he gets the chance to.

On the other, we're heading into the warm months, it's a pandemic out, and because of the pandemic she's already given herself free leave to drop personal hygiene.

Why not just walk around naked? It's getting warm, you won't freeze. You won't soil any clothes, husband can't wash them. Husband gets to see tits, he can't complain. It's a pandemic, you don't need to stay presentable to go out or take any visitors. Win/win/win?

Bonus points if you replace the carpet with tile and get your husband a garden hose.
 
>To me, this sounds like a fairy tale. I don’t leave the house: it’s not safe with an infant during a pandemic.
This fucking pandemic has enabled so many would-be shut-ins to just indulge themselves. Babies are literally the least affected demographic when it comes to COVID.
I look forward to an endless summer of these depressed losers whining about re-openings when most everyone is vaccinated and suddenly they're expected to engage with the rest of the world again for fear of being a pariah.
 
>To me, this sounds like a fairy tale. I don’t leave the house: it’s not safe with an infant during a pandemic.
This fucking pandemic has enabled so many would-be shut-ins to just indulge themselves. Babies are literally the least affected demographic when it comes to COVID.
I look forward to an endless summer of these depressed losers whining about re-openings when most everyone is vaccinated and suddenly they're expected to engage with the rest of the world again for fear of being a pariah.
It's one of my favorite things when people complain about others having standards and holding themselves to such, you get to watch the crabs in the bucket whining about all those other crabs out happily scuttling about and making them feel bad about their fetid little bucket. Prime schadenfreude, and all you have to do to reap it is be a decent, happy person.
 
So at the end she says she is super appreciative but that rings hollow when you have a line like this at the start:
I know that I am lucky to have him, he is a saint — but does he know how lucky he is?
And then she does not even refer to herself. She refers to the fact that he goes out in the World of WuFlu(which millions of people have been doing with no ill effects for quite some time btw). She is a fearful-jealous shrew and he probably resents her a ton but has enough sense to say nothing.
I get frustrated that he feels the need to tidy the kitchen instead of sitting down the second dinner is ready. He sees the pile of pots and pans that need washing
Just speaking for myself it really bothers me when I eat knowing there are dishes to be done. I like to finish cooking, clean up quickly, then eat so I can enjoy my meal without the looming tedium of cleaning up all of the dishes.
He thinks that you’ve presented a problem, and he’s fixed it, why are you not patting him on the back? When in reality, all you wanted was for him to acknowledge that you were justified in feeling annoyed. So you can move on.
But you do not move on. Women never fucking move on. You are going to harbor that annoyance for years and keep spending time with a person you cannot stand and you are going to keep bitching about her until he tunes you out and just mindlessly says, "Oh you are so right" and you get pissed because you know he is just placating you and worse still you know that the reason he is placating you is that you caused it with your incessant bullshit.
It is my choice to always be present with my children.
It kind of sounds like you are never present rather you just go through the motions while your husband, as you admit, is keeping everything together.

This woman needs therapy ASAP or as many have said in this thread she is going to do something bad.
 
Prime example of why domesticated men are either not marrying or marrying later in life with younger women. What does this woman bring of value to this man's life? Work/income? No. Housework? He does it better than she ever could. Childcare? She seems apathetic/useless at that. Maybe she gives him some sugar once in a while. So basically nothing.

"He doesn't know how lucky he is to have me", no bitch, he probably just doesn't know any better. He finds a woman who contributes in the slightest more than you and you area done. Unless you are giving him sex on command, you aren't putting much into the relationship, certainly not if you are writing to bitch on that website.
 
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But you do not move on. Women never fucking move on. You are going to harbor that annoyance for years and keep spending time with a person you cannot stand and you are going to keep bitching about her until he tunes you out and just mindlessly says, "Oh you are so right" and you get pissed because you know he is just placating you and worse still you know that the reason he is placating you is that you caused it with your incessant bullshit.
First rule of arguing with women: do not do it.
Second rule: she wins. She always wins because if she loses an argument she will make your life HELL as revenge. Just nod and genuflect and say you were wrong. You're not, and she knows it. The alternative is worse. Just be the first one to contact a divorce lawyer and get those ducks in a row when it starts getting bad.
 
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If you're the kind of guy who doesn't do the laundry and wondered "how would things change if I started doing it more?" now you know; she'd get mad that you did it. So do or don't do it, knowing you will be resented either way.

I like half-assing it; once I shower, I'm the cleanest thing in the house, so why would my towel be dirty? As long as it dries, go a week, two weeks. Whenever you feel like making it smell like detergent again.
 
If you're the kind of guy who doesn't do the laundry and wondered "how would things change if I started doing it more?" now you know; she'd get mad that you did it. So do or don't do it, knowing you will be resented either way.
I'd do my own housework regardless, time allowing, because that way I know it gets done right.

In any event, a person that doesn't want to be pleased is going to be impossible to please. Author of the article is Exhibit A. Sometimes people are about as happy as they make up their minds to be, and she's made up her mind to be a miserable shut-in with a perpetual inferiority complex and zero ability to appreciate her good fortunes.
 
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I like half-assing it; once I shower, I'm the cleanest thing in the house, so why would my towel be dirty? As long as it dries, go a week, two weeks. Whenever you feel like making it smell like detergent again.
Ok Wally.
Screenshot_20210322-152939_DuckDuckGo.jpg
 
When I have women in my life come to me angry, I sometimes just straight up ask now “do you want help solving this, or do you want me to just listen?”
This x 1000
It took me a long time to figure this out, but now I flat out ask my wife this question.
She's totally cool with it, and very occasionally she actually wants advice, but most of the time she just needs to vent. It's a lot better than offering advice that won't be listened to anyway, and she's happy that I'm not interrupting.
Eta: I'm pretty sure that dude is gay though.
 
This x 1000
It took me a long time to figure this out, but now I flat out ask my wife this question.
She's totally cool with it, and very occasionally she actually wants advice, but most of the time she just needs to vent. It's a lot better than offering advice that won't be listened to anyway, and she's happy that I'm not interrupting.
Eta: I'm pretty sure that dude is gay though.
One thing my wife and I started doing as friends is a simple statement/question:

"Are you telling at me or TO me?" or "I'm not yelling at you, I'm yelling TO you."

Stops a lot of fights before they even start.
 
Writer is a self obsessed cunt but her angst isn't exactly irrational. Men and women have certain responsibilities, things they should naturally take care of to create a well running family unit. 50 years of globohomo propaganda to the contrary can't rewire 150,000 years of human development. If it were the other way around and she was taking care of all the home repairs, finances, and discipline he could be forgiven for feeling less useful as a man. In her case though its compounded by the fact that it's not just roles reversing, it's him doing everything. Deep down she rightfully understands she's completely useless, and the more he pretends she's not the more she resents him. He's not only the bread winner, but he also has taken on her household responsibilities as well. If she can't take care of the domestic or external needs of the family... then to quote the Bobs, what exactly is it you do here?
 
So... you can do nothing around the house, you can be a shut-in, you can not shower or clean your teeth, you can have no job, but as long as you have a vagina you'll find a great partner if you engage in sex with him once in a while?

OK.
 
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