A 30-year-old woman, the Original Poster (OP), has been married to her 32-year-old husband, Tom, for four years. Both individuals hold full-time employment, but a clear division of household labor has formed where the OP is solely responsible for preparing dinner every night.
When the OP recently stated she would no longer cook every night and proposed sharing the cooking duties, Tom reacted negatively, claiming the division was fine because the OP was better at it and he was too tired. This led to frustration, with the OP feeling the arrangement was unfair given both work full-time. The central question is whether the OP is wrong for refusing to continue handling all the evening meal preparation.

AITAH for telling my husband I won’t cook dinner every night because I also work full-time?








In the field of relationship dynamics, Dr. Jordan Coleman is known for noting, “Equity in partnership is not about identical tasks, but about a balanced contribution of effort, time, and emotional labor. When one partner defaults into a domestic role, it creates an unseen burden that erodes partnership satisfaction.”
The situation highlights a common issue: the normalization of unequal domestic labor, often called the ‘second shift.’ The OP initially accepted this role because she enjoyed cooking, but enjoyment does not negate the need for balance when it becomes an exhausting routine. Tom’s defense—that she is ‘better at it’ and that he is ‘too tired’—are common avoidance tactics that fail to acknowledge the shared nature of their professional lives. He is leveraging convenience and past behavior to resist a necessary adjustment in boundaries.
The OP was justified in setting a boundary regarding an unfair division of labor, especially when both parties work full-time. Her action of refusing to cook every night is a necessary step toward re-negotiating the partnership agreement. A constructive path forward would involve moving beyond the specific task of cooking and focusing on achieving equitable overall domestic load sharing, perhaps by having Tom take over all cleanup duties or another equivalent responsibility several nights a week.
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The OP is facing a conflict where her need for equitable distribution of household labor clashes with her husband’s established comfort and resistance to change, which he minimizes as a small issue. Tom relies on the precedent set by the OP’s previous willingness to cook, leading to resentment about the imbalance of domestic responsibility.
Should the OP hold firm on her boundary regarding shared cooking duties, or is her expectation unreasonable given her husband’s claims of work fatigue and the fact that she previously enjoyed cooking? Readers must decide where the fairness lies in this domestic arrangement.







