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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Aibu to expect my husband to manage work/life better or is this normal?

32 replies

chailatte85 · Today 08:23

I am wondering if I’m BU here as my husband says I am.
With the weather being so good yesterday I decided I’d do a bbq so I went and bought all the food, salads ect and prepped so that I could stick it on when my husband got home. He knew I was doing a bbq as I had checked with him. I even picked up a bottle of wine and made up a few different salads ect. Kids were excited too.
My husband got home from work about 18:30 and within minutes has to take an important work call to try fix something. This call went on for over an hour in the kitchen where I was trying to get sorted and I ended up having to feed the kids their food as it was getting late.
I understand some things happen ect but it’s becoming a more regular occurrence with him. A few weeks ago we were leaving to watch our DDs perform in a show and he had his laptop with him as he had offered to do on-call for someone. The other morning he took a call at 6am and proceeded to try solve the issue whilst I was trying to sleep instead of going downstairs. Another time I booked an expensive restaurent for his birthday and whilst we were waiting at the bar he left for another 40 minutes to take a call.
He claims he’s a manager and it’s expected of him. I work too but my job mainly finishes when I finish.
I wasn’t happy yesterday and told him this and also highlighted how on Mondays he goes to the gym and Tuesday he manages to go for a long run after work and somehow those days never get affected by work calls or he will call them back afterwards. It then became a huge argument where he said I brought down the mood of the whole bbq instead of just enjoying it.
I also highlighted to him how he can plan things with his friends for example he’s out this weekend for a night out, and then he’s away in two weeks for a night away but not once has he booked any time off whilst the kids are on their summer holidays to do something with them despite talking last month of doing a beach day or taking our oldest ds and his friends to play golf.
Maybe it is the norm but I think what got me yesterday was I just see loads of friends/families and neighbours out and about together as a family enjoying the good weather whereas I don’t feel I have that with my husband.

OP posts:
DillyDillie · Today 09:41

He really is selfish and this shows how he manages work to suit himself. It needs explaining that his kids will notice and resent that he treats them so badly. They may not say anything yet but they will already have noticed.
If the DC say anything be honest and do not become an accomplice to your DH's behaviour.

Rachelshair · Today 09:41

It sounds like his priorities (marathon rest, exercise, seeing friends) take precedence over work, and he can plan for this, but family life and time with you does not. I'd be very pissed off with that. And the first time he took a work call in our bedroom when I was asleep would be the last, that is so disrespectful.
Don't wait for him to be available before you do something enjoyable, plan for him to not be around. You've not got a present husband, but you're able to work part time, so that's the upside?

Morepositivemum · Today 09:42

I honestly think men prioritise work over everything. I don’t get it and find it sad but then on the other side of it had dh not I suppose with me being in and out of work due to the kids (childcare issues and cost meant I’ve had to leave work a few times) and looking at all my friends who work three or four days due to kids I’m very torn as how would the house keep going in the principal breadearner hadn’t made work his priority. But then I’m back to the poor kids … but then it’s not just men, I know two women who are principle bread earners and their dh’s say they work too much etc

Sorry not much help, just … it’s similar here op

Pansykavalier · Today 09:53

glitterpaperchain · Today 09:40

If you're right that he has a pattern of letting work encroach on family time but not letting it encroach on his hobbies or time with his friends, then he's showing you exactly where his priorities lie

Exactly this.

Those who say that being available at all times comes with some jobs seem to have missed this.

And him disturbing OP’s sleep and dinner prep is just rude.

Livpool · Today 10:32

He sounds like a selfish prick. And to say you ruined the bbq by daring to raise your issues!

StandingDeskDisco · Today 11:24

This call went on for over an hour in the kitchen where I was trying to get sorted
[...]
The other morning he took a call at 6am and proceeded to try solve the issue whilst I was trying to sleep instead of going downstairs.

One of two things is happening here:

  1. He is 'willy waving' his massively important job, basically showing off to you about how he is the big man, so he takes these calls right in front of you and makes you listen to how vitally important he is.
  2. He is utterly self-absorbed and thoughtless, and doesn't realise he should take himself out of the room for these calls.

Either way, you need to speak up - tell him in the bluntest terms "go into another room" - do this while he is on the call, in a loud voice, so you actually disrupt the call with your volume. Then he will have to go. If he pauses the call to tell you off for being loud and interrupting, don't apologise, just repeat that he needs to go into another room.

As for his lack of engagement with family and failure to use his annual leave for the family instead of himself - you could have discussions with him, but a leopard doesn't change its spots: if he is selfish then he is selfish, and you need to consider your options.

Izzasaurus · Today 12:02

Another voice for 'you're not being unreasonable' here. It is the hypocrisy / inconsistency that jumps out here. If these were job demands that he genuinely could not avoid (and I fully accept that some people do have jobs where they are expected to do this sort of on-call / extra work in emergencies type of thing), he wouldn't be able to do the nights out with mates or the gym time uninterrupted either.

It sounds like he knows he does have to do extra things outside of 'normal' work hours, but he plans to sacrifice family time for these things rather than what he sees as the 'him' time.

I do think the work/life balance issue is quite a common one. I'm guilty of it with my own family sometimes - I will say yes to extra things or over-commit when I know my lovely DH will take up the slack for me, and that isn't fair of me really. Then again this extra work is a necessity and expectation for my job, it's something all my colleagues do too and I do think my career would suffer without it. My DH did know this when he supported me to take my current role.

In my case though I just don't do many hobbies or 1:1 friend things at all - largely because I feel guilty about doing them when my DH is sometimes doing more than his fair share with family life. I guess it wouldn't be great for your DH's wellbeing for him to have to sacrifice all of the 'him' things, but it does sound like he need a better balance!

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