The Bakersfield Californian

CAROLYN HAX

- ADVICE WITH ATTITUDE & A GROUNDED SET OF VALUES Need Carolyn’s advice? Email her at tellme@washpost.com; follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax; or chat with her online at 9 a.m. Pacific time each Friday at www.washington­post.com.

Dear Carolyn: My partner is great at doing his fair share, or even more, of the three daily tasks: dishes, laundry and the kids’ bath time (toddler and preschoole­r). He sucks at cleaning up after himself and the kids and all non daily tasks. All the little things necessary to keep a household running fall on me. Also, we would never spend any time alone together if I didn’t plan it.

Sometimes he thanks me and recognizes some of the things I do, but it hasn’t sunk in that it actually takes my time and brain space to do all of the things. I spend all my time dealing with those things, my share of the daily stuff, doing child care or working on my master’s degree. If I’m lucky, I get 30 minutes a week to talk with my sister or dad while chasing kids, but that is all the socializat­ion I get. I don’t even have time to shower every day.

My partner has time for playing on his computer and watching shows because he spends his non-child-care time on himself instead of the stuff that needs to get done. How can I get my life back? How can I stop resenting that he gets hobbies and I don’t? How can I reconnect with my family and friends without time to actually do so? I’m drowning. — Tired

Dear Tired: If you don’t “get” socializat­ion or hobbies or a life under current conditions, you have to take them. You both need this.

I say this knowing there are times we can’t just take things for ourselves in good conscience, sure. When both parents are scrambling full-time-plus to keep things running, for example, or when taking them would deprive your kids of something essential, or when you’re the solo parent, you can’t just peace out and leave.

But if your husband has time in his day for TV-and-computerin­g, and if some of your corners are cuttable — and if the advanced-degree timetable can stretch — then you can take some hobbies. And a shower, I swear.

The magic bank from which you are withdrawin­g this personal time has three sources: 1. A shorter and more efficient household to-do list. 2. A longer schedule for non-urgent tasks. 3. A more balanced redelegati­on of responsibi­lities.

You refer to your share of the daily stuff. You say your partner is great at the daily stuff. Great! Then he can do more of it, lessening your “share” to account for the non daily stuff of which your share is apparently 100 percent.

Don’t just declare this to him, though. Plan your way to it, together. Start by having each of you write down all the jobs the other does. Go over them together, fill in what you missed. Discuss time requiremen­ts. See the scope of it, don’t just feel it. Then discuss whether anything on the list can be dropped, streamline­d, postponed, automated, outsourced, stretched out on a longer schedule.

Then talk about who does and doesn’t mind each chore, what aligns with whose interests and talents, who is realistica­lly available, who can knock them out while enjoying some pleasant something else, like music, TV, calls. Talk about things you can split: One of you schedules the appointmen­ts, the other follows through.

Then: Agree to a daily hard-stop time — one hour after kiddie bedtime, say — where you roll unfinished items over to tomorrow, or into a last big push you do together. After which you both take breathing time and/or cry in the bathtub.

Any surprise free time in the day is yours. If only one of you ever has free time, discuss, rebalance.

And: Declare one night your date night, as soon as the CEO of sitter-finding finds the weekly sitter. Alternate weeks as the date planner.

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