38 answers

How to Get Husband to Help More...?

I wanted to get some advise on how to get my husband to help out more with our 9 month daughter. I try so hard to keep my cool when - I've gone to work from 5am to 12:30pm taken care of my daughter ran around picking up my nephews(12 & 6) taking care of them after school, cleaning, and not getting to bed until 11pm every night, and him coming home to play FREAKING VIDEO GAMES. I just want him to help out with out me having to constantly ask or as he calls it "nag" - wash some bottles, feed her, give her a bath, clean up a little. He works from 8am to about 7pm and thinks I only work "part time", I work 1 hour shy of a full 8 hour day at work and then take care of the kids. I know I need time for myself to be a better mom, but how can this be done if the other parent is not helping. I am really at my wits end and really feel like moving away from him for a while to appreciate what he has and realize that family is FIRST and it takes work from BOTH! Any advise would GREATLY be appreciated.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you all for your comments, suggestions, and prayers. It is CRAZY to see how many of us go throught the same things even though we feel like we are the only ones most of the time. I wrote him a letter and I think my writing it down helped him to hear what I was really feeling so it didn't come across as nagging. We are woman, but that doesn't mean that we have to do everything. We don't live in those times anymore. Thanks again!

Featured Answers

C.,
Here is what worked for me years ago when I was a stay at home mom. I scheduled a vacation for me with some friends for 3 days, (just driving distance away) and left him a list of what got done everyday, (monday was bed linens, tuesday was the board meeting at the preschool, wednesday was the PTA meeting), and told him he was responsible for the kids, and making the meetings, as well as everything in the house. I left monday morning and by tuesday afternoon he was calling saying that he was sorry and could I come back, he also said he would never agian think that a stay at home mom didn't have a full time job. I haven't had a problem since (it's been five years) I cook, he does all the clean up and the dishes, I never have to take the garbage out (except when he is out of town on a buisness trip) he cleans the cat box, and I haven't ironed anything in five years... Good luck
Amanda

1 mom found this helpful

Hi llyCarin,
I'm the mom of almost 9 month old twins, with some of the same concerns. Hubby is great with entertaining kids, feeding, loving the kids, but I'm going back to work p/t next year and I've been freaking out about how it's gonna work....I could use a little more help around the house. I've expressed my concerns and he HAS stepped it up a bit around home. I did find an interesting website called equallysharedparenting.com. Rare would be the man who would TOTALLY go for the concept, but I DID find some good hints about division of labor etc. Patience and baby steps.....
Good luck. I'm here if you need to vent!
N.

I have an 8 month old daughter and also work part time. My husband used to help out around the house but recently got a new more stressful job and is now complaining that I don't do the laundry enough, or do the dishes every night. My daughter is a terrible sleeper and will only sleep if I am lying next to her and therefore I have to go to bed by 9 everynight. (she wakes up 5 minutes after I get out of bed so I can't just put her to sleep then do housework.) It used to be so much easier when he used to help out more. Now all he wants to do is "relax" and play video games! I never get to relax. I've tried to talk to him and he'll change for a night and then go back to his old ways. What do you think they'd do if the video games one day disappeared??? :)
Sorry can't offer much advice... just know you're not the only one! Good Luck.

More Answers

Hi C.,
This sounds so familiar! My husband has improved recently but more or less, his job exhausts him, and he's not about to give up his hobbies (rugby, poker night with the boys, etc).

I used to be all bitter about it because I never got any time for myself. Then one day I got sick of it and sort of had this little meltdown. I came to a mental place where I saw with some clarity that I did not have a husband and 2 kids, I just had 3 kids, one of whom had a pretty decent job. I was seriously ready to throw all his stuff out on the front lawn, I kid you not. I told him that I was going to hire people to take care of the things he wasn't helping me with (housework, dinner prep, child care, etc.). He was like, where are we going to get the money for all that? And I told him, well, if you have the money to do what you want, then SO DO I!

So I re-arranged our finances so that I could hire a cleaning lady (that was seriously one of the happier days of my life, I'm telling you). After a month or two, we had adjusted to that money being taken out of the account (yes, he started spending less $ on poker and going to the bar with the rugby club!). And our house was sparkling clean all the time! So then, I hired someone to help with the childcare part time - she picks them up from school, helps with homework, gives them their baths, does the laundry etc. Can't tell you how wonderful that has been! Again, family budget adjusted to the extra cost pretty easily. I do a lot less clothes shopping, and hubby spends less on games and toys. We drive used cars instead of new ones now. And then, in my coup de grace, I started going to Dream Dinners. Now, surprisingly, that has saved us money, and it has saved my sanity as well, since I have never been a fan of grocery shopping or cooking.

Now the funny thing is, my husband saw that I was just OVER his behavior. Slowly, he has started to spend more time with me and the kids, and has started showing his appreciation of the things I do around the house, with the kids, etc. He is doing more now - where before he'd rather have died than take the girls to ballet class, he will do it now. He helps cook dinner more often. He runs errands. I think it was that he finally saw that I could seriously take him or leave him with the way he was acting, and he started to shape up somewhat.

So, I don't have the answer on how to totally reform the pigheaded male, but once I stopped picking up his slack, life got better for me. I hope this helps, and good luck!!

2 moms found this helpful

Hi C. - you are SO not alone in this-!!! This has been one of the main issues in my marriage. I have always worked from home, and have always felt like I've had to do everything. The resentment is huge.

After realizing I couldn't change my husband, and he wasn't responding to me asking for what I needed, I decided to change what I was doing in order for me not to go crazy. I decided to take one evening a week to do what I wanted (I joined a choir, took a painting class, took a ceramics class, etc.) - nothing short of a major holiday could change that schedule - and my husband watched the kids. If he didn't want to watch the kids, then I told him we shell out $45 for a babysitter once a week. After HE decided we couldn't afford that, he watched the kids.
It turned out to be the best thing I could have done. My husband complained about it every week for 5 years. BUT - (and he now admits this) - he bonded with the kids in a way he never had before - and he really appreciated it when I came back - and he quit complaining about the house being messy sometimes. And I got some much needed time to myself.

For a few years, I also took week long vacations once a year by myself to visit family, or go to a conference, etc. This was really good for my husband - he still doesn't help a ton, but he is really really appreciative of what I do. And he doesn't ignore me as much anymore when I make it a point to ask for help.

I would also look at things to eliminate in your life - can your nephews' parents find alternate arrangements for them? Are you being paid to be their caregiver? Is there a way to reduce the number of hours you work? Also - can you get your husband to commit to a job(s) around the house that is always his? That if it doesn't get done, no one else does it?

Good luck with this one - I wish I had the answer to this as well!

2 moms found this helpful

does your husband ever watch your daughter alone on weekends while you run errands? When my twins were infants, my husband would occasionally watch them on Saturday morning so I could do a Costco run or other such errands and when I came back he would have a dazed "I don't know how you do this all day" look on his face. Sometimes husbands don't realize just *how* much work a little one can be until they have a chance to "solo".

Meanwhile, give yourself a pat on the back for being an AWESOME mommy.

1 mom found this helpful

I am having the same trouble...apparently a lot of people are, but after reading some of the responses I have found that I am a little more frustrated than ever. I think one of the other readers summed it up by calling husbands our "oldest children" and although I agree completely, deep down that just doesn't sit well with me. Men currently dominate our modern society and in the past have been superior to women(still true in some places) and yet everyone's solutions are based on stroking our husbands' egos and treating them like children with a learning disability. We allow men to run the world, but we give them excuses for why they can't adapt to family life. It shouldn't be rocket science for a husband to figure out how to pick up a mess when he sees one or help put a child to bed at night. If they can conquer the world and the workplace, our house should be no different, so why is it?

I apologize for being sooooo negative. I am just another frustrated mom who wants to know how to make things work without "babying" my husband. I have two sons and don't want to be parenting a third. I guess in the heat of the moment, this is how I really feel, and would just like some solution.

Sorry again for the negativity, I really do wish you the best of luck with it all!

1 mom found this helpful

HI C.!

First off, it's easy to understand why so many wives call their husbands their "oldest child"....I never understood this until I had kids :o)

In my experience, no matter how many "heavy sighs" and "nagging" I did, the best thing I EVER did, was to simply to ask my husband for help. BUT...I had to be VERY specific! I learned that he didn't know how to "jump in and help". He needed ME to tell him EXACTLY what to do.

I would always say "honey, it would help me ALOT if you could get the bath going". Or, "please put the dishes in the dishwasher"....or whatever you need help with. But if I wasn't specific, then he thought I had it "all under control" and he just felt "in the way", so he went off to get OUT of the way.

Now, if he EXPECTS you to do everything, because you only work Parttime, then you have another situation on your hands, and your husband needs to understand how hard you work. My situation was "sort of" like this. It took my husband to be home for a day to see me "in action". I know he would be home that day (so I really made an attempt to show him). He was home catching up on paperwork, and would always "strike up" conversation with me. I said "Sorry honey, but I have to do this by 9, and this by 9:30, and be there at 10:15....and so on". Then 2 hours laters, he would try again...."I said, oh..sorry honey, but I have to get this done before I pickup the boys, because I can't do it when they get home, and I'm still trying to figure out dinner for tonight....and oh shoot, I hope I can return that call before 1...." I would really play it out for him. :o) After that, I knew he felt ignored, but I remained "loving and hopeful" that we would soon talk. Then I waited until I knew the kids were almost done eating :o) I went to my husband, and said "sorry honey, how was your day?" A minute later, the kids called for me :o) He never got to tell me how his day was, and all he saw was me running in and out of the house as fast as I could! I was exhausted that day, but I had to "step it up" for him to understand. I told him that night, that if he helped me get the kids ready for bed and helped me cleanup the "afternoon", then we might get a chance to visit for a few minutes, before I went to bed.

Needless to say, he's a HUGE help in our home today. AND he loves it! He had no idea what he was missing with his kids. Now, when he gets home, Daddy "takes over" and I can do more things and get done sooner. But, I must say that the "daddy way" is alot different than the "mommy way"... but as long as he helps is all I'm interested in :o) It took about 1 year to get our perfect routine, but it's working, and we no longer have those problems.

I hope my experience can help for your situation :o)

N.

1 mom found this helpful

I just found this great hub that is relevant to this issue. Print it out and give it to your husband!

http://hubpages.com/hub/10-Little-Ways-To-Show-Your-Wife-...

1 mom found this helpful

C.,
Here is what worked for me years ago when I was a stay at home mom. I scheduled a vacation for me with some friends for 3 days, (just driving distance away) and left him a list of what got done everyday, (monday was bed linens, tuesday was the board meeting at the preschool, wednesday was the PTA meeting), and told him he was responsible for the kids, and making the meetings, as well as everything in the house. I left monday morning and by tuesday afternoon he was calling saying that he was sorry and could I come back, he also said he would never agian think that a stay at home mom didn't have a full time job. I haven't had a problem since (it's been five years) I cook, he does all the clean up and the dishes, I never have to take the garbage out (except when he is out of town on a buisness trip) he cleans the cat box, and I haven't ironed anything in five years... Good luck
Amanda

1 mom found this helpful

My husband wasn't necessarily bad about helping out...well, yes he was, but it wasn't a hassle to get him to help. But, one day, he had to watch my son for most of the day for some reason. And when I got home, my husband apologized to me. (I was a stay-at-home mom at the time) He said, "I had no idea how much work it is to watch our son all day." But the kicker is that all he did was watch and entertain him. He didn't do the dishes. He didn't do the bills. He didn't "teach" him. He didn't do laundry. Yet it was still quite a chore! Have your husband take over for a day, then he'll realize how hard it is!

My husband and I also made a deal that it is his sole responsibilty to put our son to bed Monday-Friday. Our son is 3, and he's been doing this for about 2 years now. It gives me some quiet time, and him and our son some together time.

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