Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wage-earning spouse feels undervalue­d

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Dear Carolyn: I am our family’s income earner, and my spouse stays home with our children. There’s been so much discussion of how valuable and important stay-home parents are that, at least in our house, things have slowly tipped to the point where my contributi­ons aren’t valued at all.

I know at-home parents ARE incredible and have historical­ly been undervalue­d. I know my spouse’s days can be very difficult, repetitive, physical, etc.

However, mine are, too, starting with a fairly grueling commute. I deal with difficult people and often have nothing left to give. And then I get home and am immediatel­y told it’s my turn to be “on duty,” as though I’ve been on break for the past 11 hours. I don’t feel there’s any space for me to complain. We split the cooking and outsource cleaning (spouse hates housework of any kind). I just feel there is a societal presumptio­n that the at-home spouse is a saint and the income-earning parent must perpetuall­y remind self of that fact. How do I fix this dynamic? – Resetting the Pendulum

Resetting the Pendulum: I know every household, child, parental temperamen­t, job, and commute is different – so the very idea of piling all these things onto a scale to see who has it tougher is ridiculous. But when has that ever stopped me.

Home-with-kids vs. at-an-office reality is that the home version is just relentless. Even people who have relentless jobs can finish their sentences and go to the bathroom alone.

What you have is this: You are in charge of your head space to a degree no on-duty parent of littles can be.

I do not mean to pile on; I am just setting a baseline.

One advantage you have is that commute. Again – you lose this time, and rush-hours are punishing. But, still: You are in charge of your head space. No one is tugging at you and saying mommy daddy mommy daddy. So: Ear buds on the train, speakers in the car, play something you look forward to.

Then look at your day. Breaks? Lunch? Can use down times better?

More radically – can you relocate? Change jobs?

Make the changes you can, then live with them a bit – then it’s time to talk to your spouse about whatever needs you’re still feeling.

Wanting to feel appreciate­d is valid, so say that. At-home spouse is a hero, you’re grateful – but also feeling erased and burned out by long days plus immediate “on duty” status. Being able to cite the adjustment­s you’ve tried will help you here.

Ask for changes that don’t burden your spouse: A sitter one or two nights per week; a “parent’s helper” (neighborho­od teen) daily around dinnertime; one night where Spouse stays “on duty” in return for a weekend “shift” off ?

Also, arrange to discuss bigger or longer-term plans. This is a moment you’re in, not a permanent state of being; knowing things will change on their own is a form of relief. The question is whether you can still like yourselves and each other as you get there.

Little kids are just tough.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

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