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Housework in your home

(72 Posts)
Foden7 Fri 08-Aug-25 20:20:52

This is getting me down & angry in our home.
He thinks cleaning is - hoovering
Doesn’t dust, make bed, clean scum off the shower glass, clean bathroom, clean window
Just what I can think off just now
Has started since retirement going to shop everyday!
Ask what we need- puts it on lists but comes back and he’s forgot something!
Or will ask at 9.30am wants needed from shop today- I can’t even think at that time - like my sleep. He early riser
He will not do a big shop as he won’t push a trolley so only a basket
If I can’t think wants needed- he will say get it later!
He has to go out every afternoon- wether on his own or with me if I want to
Never thinks house needs anything doing to
Paint,garden etc - although he’s not a diy

I’ve asked a few times about sharing housework as I’m not the cleaner, as he says yes I will try to remember
Does for couple of weeks, then nothing

If I can see/remember/do it why can’t he ?

He will do, and I think only to benefit himself
Washing
Tidy kitchen after tea
Take bins out
Does car maintenance
Cut grass - nothing else in the garden
Shops everyday- so he has something to eat that day

I can not keep reminding him as this is like me telling a child he’s bloody 70
Or he will say I’ll do it - not done

I can be talking to him and he’s on his tablet or mobile and he can’t even look up
I know he’s not listening - switched off

I’m I being unreasonable here ? Asking too much ?
Does your dh/dp pick what they want to do housewise ?

V3ra Sat 09-Aug-25 10:28:24

I can be talking to him and he’s on his tablet or mobile and he can’t even look up
I know he’s not listening - switched off

Lots to think about in your post Foden but on this particular point does your husband listen to things on a gadget through his hearing aids?
Mine does and he is totally oblivious if I randomly speak to him.
I have to get his attention first, then he has to disconnect, by which time the moment's often passed if it was just a throwaway comment 🙄

NotSpaghetti Sat 09-Aug-25 10:49:25

I think changing people at 70 won't work.

Just make the list the night before and clean what is most important to you.
... at least he's hoovering!

Lathyrus3 Sat 09-Aug-25 10:56:42

Wait till the holiday season is over and then rent a holiday home for a month ( it’ll be cheaper). Go and live on your own and see if you like it.

You can still meet up with him for coffee.

It’ll do him good too.

Shelflife Sat 09-Aug-25 10:57:52

As I mentioned in my previous post, my husband wants to go out for coffee every single day, something he would never have done prior to his diognis of Alzheimers. He likes me to go with him
so I do that, more often than not I would prefer to remain at home. He has always been a creature of habit but now his daily routine is on a different level!

HowVeryDareYou2 Sat 09-Aug-25 11:19:12

Do you have set meals on the other days of the week, too? Perhaps your husband is bored with having Chilli every Thursday. Can he cook? Could you leave him a recipe for something and let him do it?

Athrawes Sat 09-Aug-25 12:57:20

I never do housework on a regular basis. I think it's boring as it doesn't last 5 minutes so I do it if I feel (a) I want to - which is rare! (b) someone is about to visit (c) even when I can see the dust! We have people in and out a fair bit and have had no comments to date - probably just tactful!

Foden7 Sat 09-Aug-25 13:01:56

He just gets distracted- that’s it, can’t multi tasks like us women do
Everything has to be thought out and weighed up.
His passions are motorbikes, tennis & cars
I have hobbies but he says “ but your not passionate about them”
He plays tennis still and is physically fit (odd niggle) goes on his motorbike which is so so fast(think of motorbike racing on tv) and I know he can ride it but I don’t like him going out on it now because I know his awareness is not the same(mainly because he’s bloody looking at other cars)

The bloody kitchen is still the same as it was when we bought the house, no interest !
Yet he’s been looking at sports/fast cars around 18k cash
The house is not his priority as long as he can get out on his bikes, tennis and coffee he’s happy
Me- not so , if I don’t do it, it gets left or I’ll do it . My home is my relaxing safe place , I think it stems from being brought up by my mum on her own after my dad died very young and mum really struggled in the 60’s with 6 children . Life was hard , no money some days for a meal or lighting . Club men knocking at the door and having to say mum not in. She did an excellent job when I look back and I could not of coped
Where as dp dad own business , mum worked part time. Owned their own house in the late 50’s .3 kids . No hardship totally did up bringing , holidays , did things as a family
This is where I get my get stuck in from because us girls did all the jobs around the house

I’m not talking to him at the moment either
because he told me to sell/get rid of an exercise bike that was stuck in the spare bedroom doing nothing but hanging washing on. I did and a guy asked for it, when I asked what time should I tell him to calm for it I got met with
“ you want me to decide now, I’m chilling (on internet)
So I just said “ so I tell him your chilling then” he never spoke after that
Next morning acts like nothing been said
“ tell the guy he can come at 4pm “

He changes his mind like the bloody weather
He will under no circumstances ask me what’s wrong, Will just carry on his day
He will no longer discuss anything incase in turns into having words

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sat 09-Aug-25 14:48:21

Oh crikey. This is about so much more than housework …

SpanielCuddler Sat 09-Aug-25 15:00:36

Could you go out for a walk together? Are there any chores you could do together so that he can learn.
Sounds like he has executive function difficulties. If he likes routine give him a new one. Work out what needs doing when and put up a rota. If he’s an early riser he could get a wash on and out on the line before you are up.
Could he learn some recipes on his tablet to follow and do some meals during the week?
How about an online food shop so you can agree on what to order? You could still buy fresh locally.
Doesn’t sound like it will be easy to change things. Good luck.

LucyAnna5 Sat 09-Aug-25 15:21:10

As they’d say if this was on Mumsnet - LTB. You’re worth more respect than this.

Samsara1 Sat 09-Aug-25 15:47:17

DH does most of the housework except the cooking, the laundry, the bathrooms and the kitchen, the finances and the shopping of clothes and sundries for both!! He is wonderful.

AmberGran Sat 09-Aug-25 20:25:04

If he is just retired he may be finding it hard to adjust. He may be missing the routine and the company - plus the reason he got up every morning. If he has been getting up early for work every morning then he will probably carry on doing so. It took me ten years or more before I adjusted my clock to 6.30 but I still wake up at a.m. I was doing that for 40 years - it's not going to just switch off. Sounds like you have always had different routines.

Going to the shops may be his way of meeting people, even if just to say hello to.

DH still gets up at 5 am - by the time I get up he has emptied the dish washer and restacked with any dirty dishes, watered the pots and done a few other bits and pieces. I now get told how to stack the dishwasher so I leave to to him. If he's a techie type maybe get him working on things like the dishwasher and build it up from there.

Claremont Sat 09-Aug-25 20:51:39

butterandjam

All our life together we've shared childcare and housework, DIY and gardening.Today, he made breakfast, stripped and changed the bed, made bread and a cake, washed up lunch; I washed up breakfast, made lunch, and advance cooked tomorrow's lunch because we'll be out all morning. I put the bedding in the washer, he dried it and put it away. Sharing chores is such a long and seamless habit we never bother to discuss who's going to do what or when. We both replace loo rolls, clean lavs, put the dirty laundry in basket, put out the rubbish,plan meals, cook, and there's a running shopping list stuck on the fridge that we both add to. Whoever goes shopping takes the list from the fridge.

Yes, I think sharing of housework and chores, etc needs to be established from the start, and if it going to work in retirement. Very difficult to get out of old habits. This even more so for those who never had a job outside the home/family.

In our case, I always did everything in the home and later with the children, for 8 years. This is not because DH was sexist, or unfair, but because I didn't have an outside job, and he worked such long hours, often having to live at his place of work for nights and week-ends on top of day job. When your partner works 135 hrs a week, and you don't- you don't ask him or her to share the houseworl when he or she finally comes home, needing a complete rest. And when I went to full time Uni, with 2 young children (when youngest started school)- he still worked about 90 hours, including 1 night and 1 week-end in 3 or 4 - on top of very long days, ad still plenty of professional work to do at home.

We got help with housework then, and occasional help with after school childcare if our professional duties clashed. But still I did most of the organising, childcare and home/garden, because my hours, full time, were a lot less than his.

Now we have retired- I still do most of it- decorating, housework, gardening ... again, not because he is sexist or unfair, but I've always done it all and it sticks. He does his own ironing, and will help if I ask nicely. But the pattern is set. If always had a friend cleaner even when I stopped working, and when we moved But she retired and was not replaced. Perhaps I should find someone again- or get someone in to do some of the difficult jobs liks windows and walls/ceilings, etc.

He will come with me shopping if I ask- but if he goes, he forgets the list and comes home with all the things he gets tempted with and none that was on the list!

Carenza123 Sun 10-Aug-25 22:31:36

I get annoyed as I find myself doing everything at home. He has mostly lost his mobility but I have to remind him that he hasn’t made ME a hot drink but am expected to do everything for him. He COULD do more but won’t. He won’t change now he is in his late seventies. He has an older sister who looked after him - the ‘golden child’. It’s sad.

Knittypamela Wed 13-Aug-25 14:05:00

My husband does the garden, and all the cooking. We shop together as we enjoy it. I do hoovering and most cleaning. Somehow we've cobbled together something that works.

FranA Wed 13-Aug-25 14:19:41

You can’t change other people. You can only change yourself. Leave him to his own devices and do what suits you. That seems to be working for me.

WelshPoppy Wed 13-Aug-25 14:22:31

Mine hoovers and cooks meals, bakes and makes jam. I do most of the rest because, tbh, he doesn't do it to my standard. He does the garden and takes care of the accounts/money side of things. I'm the one who goes out if he doesn't want to. He's 73, I'm 68. He's not going to change

Jeanieallergy21 Wed 13-Aug-25 14:29:06

I am also having difficulty getting my husband to help with household tasks now he's retired, he's had 40+ years of me doing it all as I only worked part-time so it's hard to change old habits. We did draw up a list of who would do what and how often but he doesn't stick to it. There's always something more interesting to do, and he loses track of how long it has been since that task was last done, plus he doesn't seem to notice the dirt! If I remind him, he says I'm nagging! OP you have my sympathy.

Romola Wed 13-Aug-25 14:41:30

This cartoon was about young parenthood, but the point is the same.
A woman has her feet up on the sofa reading a magazine. Chaos reigns all around, including a crawling baby happily emptying a bookshelf. Husband walks in, looking aghast.
Caption: Oh darling, I just thought that if I spent the day doing what you think I do, you might get to see what I do normally do.

cc Wed 13-Aug-25 16:28:21

My husband does hoovering but doesn't do round the edges, underneath furniture or the tops of skirting boards. I'm not complaining, if he didn't do it nobody would. He also does the dishwasher.
I do the cooking, the shopping, the kitchen cleaning and sorting, and the bathrooms. Neither of us is keen on washing floors unfortunately, but one of my sons does ours when they're too dirty for him to overlook!

rosemary55 Wed 13-Aug-25 16:32:32

Sad reading this, my DH died 5 years ago having just retired , how often do you have to dust ?? vacuum ? as long as the toilets are cleaned and the sinks and worktops wiped over thats all that matters, get out there enjoy don't stress over all this stuff, ask yourself does it really matter , lifes too short , I'd give the world to have him even if he never lifted a finger sad

cc Wed 13-Aug-25 16:33:03

I have the same problem with shopping as Claremont, I have to give him a very detailed shopping list or he will choose something similar but unsuitable. He also brings home what he terms "special treats" for me, typically something that I already have in the fridge...

Patsy70 Wed 13-Aug-25 17:01:07

How long have you been together Foden7? You have had very different upbringings, but there should be a compromise on the household chores. With regard to the shopping, I would suggest you make a list for him the night before. He obviously enjoys his daily trip to the shop as part of his daily routine. You could do as Lathyrus3 suggests. As FranA has commented, you can’t change people.

kittylester Wed 13-Aug-25 17:10:40

Could you afford a cleaner?

sodapop Wed 13-Aug-25 18:06:22

I agree with FranA as well. Make your own changes to suit yourself and don't stress over his choices. Get help with cleaning and gardening and enjoy your own leisure time. Choose your battles.