I Refuse to Sacrifice My Social Life Just Because My Wife Is Tired of Being a Mom

Family & kids
2 months ago
I Refuse to Sacrifice My Social Life Just Because My Wife Is Tired of Being a Mom

When two exhausted parents start arguing about who’s working harder, things usually get noisy. This story follows a dad who just wanted a few hours with his friends and a mom who’d had more than enough of doing everything else alone.

Hey, Bright Side,

I (38M) work 50+ hours a week. My wife (37F) stays home with our two kids—a 5-year-old and a 5-month-old. She keeps saying she’s “burnt out” and that I don’t understand what it’s like being with the kids all day.

I get that it’s not easy, and I know she’s tired. But so am I. I work hard so she doesn’t have to—that was the deal we made.

The problem is, every weekend turns into her listing “to-dos” for me—grocery runs, cleaning the car, taking the kids so she can nap. If I mention going out with friends, she acts like I’ve just abandoned the family.

She says she needs “help.” I say I need space. I’m not her employee. I do my part—I work, I pay for everything, I spend time with the kids. But I’m not okay being guilt-tripped for wanting a few hours to actually have a life.

Last weekend, we finally hit the breaking point.

I said I was going to play football with friends. She said, “You’re leaving me alone again? You’d never last a day with the kids.”
I snapped and said, “Maybe not. But you wouldn’t last a week doing what I do, either.”

She called me cruel. I told her, “I’m just being honest. Other moms do this without such drama. We’re both adults—we both made these choices.” She just smiled and walked away.

The next morning, I panicked when I woke up to a note on the counter titled “Extra Cost List.” It included a full-time nanny, a housekeeper, and a cook—all priced out. It added up to an insane amount we could never afford.

She said if I want to hang out with my friends, that’s fine—but I’d need to cover those costs so she could have time for herself, too. If I can’t, then I’m “welcome to help at home,” and whatever time is left can be my “free time.”

Now I’m stuck. I can’t pay for that, but I also can’t sacrifice those few hours that make me feel alive.

So... what do I do?

Todd

I too was a stay home Mom until my kids went to college, then I found a job to help pay their college fees, accommodation and food etc. I am now the proud Mom of a Doctor and an Engineer,,, wasn't an easy road but we all got there.

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Eşiniz çocuklarınızı tek başına yapmadığına göre sizinde bakımlarında üstünüze düşeni yapmanız lazım. İnanın o anneninde kendinde hissetmesi için zamana ihtiyacı var iş bölümü üzerinde çalışırsanız her ikinizinde nefes alabileceği bir zaman çizelgesi oluşturabilirsiniz.

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She has chosen to be a stay at home mum. That's her job. If she wants a nanny, cook and housekeeper etc then get a job to pay for them.

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Boy what a spoiled brat you are! Your wife stays on duty 24/7 and then some while you get to clock out at the end of your working day. That's not fair. Either hire both a nanny and a house keeper or put your big boy pants on do what you should have been doing like help with the kids and do some chores. She needs down time too.

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Wow you're a real POS huh!?? How about YOU stay one just ONE weekend with the kids by YOURSELF and see what SHE does ALL day EVERYDAY!! You men (some) think sahm just sit around watching TV all day!! I bet you'd last about 3 hours B4 your calling your mommy (or sisters) to come help you. Do it alone ONE weekend I bet you will absolutely feel differently. Btw when does wifey get to go out with friends? Or is that only for you cave man?? You are a shitty husband and an equally shitty father(I use that term loosely). Grow TF up or you are going to be a very lonely lil man!!

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Grow up. Staying at home us a full time job. She doesn't get a break but you do. Compromise. You get an afternoon then she gets an afternoon. I have done both working and being a stay at home mom. I would rather work. Kids are non stop there is no lunch break and nap times that is when you get things done. You have to be there for each other.

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Yeah, she couldn't do what you do, but you have no idea what she goes through. It also sounds like you don't care. You work 50+ hours a week. How many hours is she working? Oh, staying home with the kids is not working? You have no clue. She is ALWAYS working! You want time with friends? Does she get anything like that? You are selfish.

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So SHE DOESN'T GET ANY FREE TIME? YOU IGNORANT, SELFISH, STUPID PRICK. Try staying home, WITH YOUR OWN KIDS, FOR THE WEEKEND. NO HELP FROM ANYONE. Just because YOU work outside of the home, does mean that she ISN'T WORKING INSIDE THE HOME. Did your parents raise you to be SO SELFISH? If you made ANY ATTEMPTS TO HELP HER, you would find a much HAPPIER WIFE. Maybe she should work outside the house too. Then YOU WOULD NEED TO PAY FOR DAYCARE. You are not thinking of her needs AT ALL. I think that she should divorce you, and then you would not have ANY FREE TIME, because YOU WOULD HAVE TO TAKE YOUR KIDS at least two days a week. You only used your balls to get her pregnant, now use them and become a real man.

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And when she comes home from her 40 hour a week job, she would STILL have to cook supper, bathe the chicken, do the laundry, etc... SHE is OWED TOME OFF, COMPLETELY FREE OF THE CHILDREN. This isn't the "Old World", MEN and WOMEN NEED to be able to rely on each other. He may be bringing in a paycheck, but that's NOT improving Her life, it pays the bills but it doesn't give her the well deserved rest, that she has EARNED. She isn't asking to have it both ways, just for things to be FAIR.

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Dear Todd,

Well, that’s the ancient marital standoff: “I work too much.” “No, I work too much.”
Anthropologists may one day classify this as a natural human mating ritual. Let’s get into it.

1. First, a fact check—your wife is not being dramatic.

You may not like hearing this, but staying home with two children is not “easier,” just different. Full-time stay-at-home parenting averages 50–60 hours of unpaid labor per week, including physical care, emotional regulation, and domestic work. And, believe us, it is comparable to high-stress jobs.

Translation: Your wife is not exaggerating. She is, quite literally, in a high-stress, sleep-deprived, physically demanding role.

And you, Todd, also work 50+ hours. So you’re both drowning—just in different oceans.

2. You’re not wrong for wanting space.

Humans require autonomy. If all your time is spoken for—job, chores, childcare—your brain will scream for oxygen. Wanting a few hours of football with your friends is not selfish; it’s maintenance.

But here’s the issue:
Your need for freedom doesn’t cancel out her need for rest.
And her need for rest doesn’t cancel out your need for freedom.

You two are trying to “win” a fight where winning is impossible.

3. Now... the line you crossed.

You said: “Other moms do this without drama.”

OMG, Todd...
No. Absolutely not.

That line is the relationship equivalent of lighting a scented candle next to a gas leak.

Comparing your wife to other women is dismissive, insulting, and guarantees emotional shutdown. If we ran that sentence through an MRI scanner, it would glow red in all the regions associated with perceived threat and social rejection.

4. And her “Nanny + housekeeper” bill?

That was sarcasm distilled into Excel form. She’s angry, exhausted, unheard, and used the only language guaranteed to get your attention: Numbers.

Before you panic—no, she doesn’t actually want a nanny, chef, and housekeeper. She wants acknowledgement that the invisible labor she does counts as work.

5. Here’s what you actually need to do.

Let’s be practical, Todd.

  • Have a “Partnership meeting”

Not an argument. Not a blame session. A logistical meeting. Babysitter optional, snacks required.
Ask two questions: “What tasks drain you the most?” and “How can we give each other at least 3 hours of guilt-free free time each week?” You’re not negotiating chores. You’re negotiating well-being.

  • Actually try a full day with the kids

Not to prove anything. To understand the load. It may recalibrate your brain.

  • Build a realistic weekend structure

Example:

Saturday morning: You take the kids (she sleeps).

Saturday afternoon: You play football.

Sunday morning: Chores split for 1 hour.

Sunday afternoon: Family time.

So when is your wife's free time? Your wife works 168 hours a week. You need to sack up, put your man pants on instead of your little spoiled boy ones and stop being a d1ck! Those children are yours too!!! So start supporting your wife emotionally, physically and spiritually or you'll be working 50 hours a week to cover her alimony and then having the kids on your days off! 50 hours isn't actually that arduous btw.i was working 60 hours whilst pregnant. In fact, ignore that, tell your wife to divorce you on the grounds of you being a bellend so that she can have the weekend to rest without trying to manage 3 children. At least with you living in lonelysaddo motel, she'll only have 2 children to deal with!

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You’re not her employee, but you are her partner. And parenthood is basically two people trying to stay married while being chronically exhausted.

Your request isn’t selfish. It’s human.
But your delivery? Todd... upgrade the software.

Talk. Plan. Share. Apologize for the comparison comment.
You’ll be shocked at how fast the temperature drops.

Warm regards,
Bright Side

Here’s a moment from another family gathering that sparked a heated debate. A birthday celebration took an unexpected turn when one guest jumped ahead of the plan, and minutes later, she was shown the door. Now the whole family is split on whether the birthday girl overreacted or simply stood her ground: I Told My SIL to Leave My Birthday After She Cut My Cake—Now My Whole Family Is Punishing Me.

Comments

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So when does this "father" get to spend time with his children? He would rather spend time with his friends than his kids? Both parents need to work and put their children in childcare, so they can be engaged parents when they are home. This he works and she stays home isn't emotionally realistic.

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You could always swap. If your wife needs to be away from the kids so badly and you want to be away from the office then she can go back to work and you can stay home. Sounds like everybody should be happy that way.

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According to Forbes, a sahm is worth $270,000 per year given the daily tasks done. So if he isn't going to help care for HIS kids and the home HE lives in, he needs to pay up. He would still be working 50 hours a week if he was single and childless, so he needs to stop acting like his wife and kids are the only reason he has a job. Men seem to forget women don't just get pregnant. Some man gets us pregnant and usually without our express consent. This woman is a married single mother and i don't blame her for not tolerating it anymore. Its pretty clear she is done being his wife. I mean, what grown man plays football with his friends? Thats just gross. How did she even muster up the ability to have 2 kids with him? She didnt marry him or have his kids because he works, she did it to have a partner and a family. He has basically abandoned them to act like a 14 yo and she is over it. He is just not it and she sees it now. I would divorce him because im smart enough to read the statistics that show women do much better after divorce. In fact, divorced mothers find more time for themselves, have less depression, and form even stronger bonds with the kids once the leech is out of the pucture. Men who refuse to contribute because they work are not worth a womans time these days. Eventually men need to realize women dont like men who are bad fathers and lovers and women don't actually give a f about mens jobs because women are just better at making money and usually have a higher education because we do do better in the workplace and at school according to multiple studies. In fact, employers report liking female employees much mire. She should go to school then leave once she can get into a comfortable job. She's not doing her kids any favors by continuing to allow this man in theor lives.

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