conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2020-08-08 01:40 pm

Ask Amy: Toddler-tornado makes a messy guest

Dear Amy: My wife and I recently bought a house and we have decided on a few rules to keep the place as clean as possible.

I invited my sister and her three kids to stay with us for the next two weeks, and while we already explained the house rules several times, the youngest child (he's 3), always manages to create a mess. I don't blame him (after all, he is a child), but my wife gets really irritated and takes it out on me.

I offered to clean the mess, if my wife would let me know. But every time this occurs, we have an argument.

I think my wife feels she's making all the sacrifices for me and my family. When we visit her family, I always try to be open and understanding (they are from another country), and I actually love it.

Today my wife snapped in front of the kids.

At first, she was so excited about this visit, but today she told me that the next time I have someone over, she will go to visit her family because she doesn't want to sacrifice anymore.

This is hurtful to me since my family has always been gracious and generous toward her.

Good Husband


Dear Husband: Three-year-olds are human tornadoes. I’m assuming that you don’t have children (yet), but experienced parents who are hosting children anticipate a period of upheaval and do their best to keep up, while understanding that – where toddlers go, messes happen.

You have asked your wife to “let you know” if there was a mess she felt needed to be cleaned up. But you (and your sister) should take this on without prompting.

At the end of every (long) day, before the kids go to bed, you should lead them around the house for a clean sweep. Set a timer, make a game of it, and lead them on a little inspection parade when you’re done, so everyone can see you’ve worked as a team.

You should encourage your wife to get enough alone-time away from the household, if that will help with her stress, but she should also work harder to be more tolerant. If she truly believed that you were stepping up, she might be able to step back.

https://www.arcamax.com/healthandspirit/lifeadvice/askamy/s-2393258?fs
cereta: (spydaddy)

[personal profile] cereta 2020-08-08 06:21 pm (UTC)(link)
This is really, really not an uncommon thing. My friend had a husband who was like this; wouldn't clean unless she got on him about it, and then gave her grief for "nagging." Hells, my spouse always slept right through the baby monitor, which meant that his "shift" at night involved me waking up from the monitor and then waking him up to go feed her.

"She Divorced Me Because I Left Dishes By The Sink" is a pretty good example of the clueless husband who doesn't understand that he's putting all of the mental labor on his wife.
cereta: Donna Noble (Donna)

[personal profile] cereta 2020-08-08 06:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Sadly, men have absorbed the cultural narrative that anything they do around the house is "helping," as opposed to "doing their share of household labor." I get told ALL the TIME how lucky I am that spouse does laundry and cleaning, and don't get me started on the narrative around him parenting his own child. So, yeah, I am utterly unsurprised that a man could regard himself as a good husband for being willing to clean up messes when he's made aware of them.