A 28-year-old electrician (OP) and his 27-year-old accountant wife, married for one year, faced a major change after the birth of their first child seven months prior. When the wife’s maternity leave ended, she decided she could not return to work due to strong feelings of guilt about putting their child in daycare.
The OP reluctantly agreed to support the family solely on his income, which required him to increase his work hours significantly, from 45 to 65-70 hours per week. Although the wife initially promised to manage all housework in exchange, she recently began demanding the OP help with chores, leading to a major argument and the wife now giving him the silent treatment. The OP is left feeling angry and trapped by the broken agreement and increased workload.

AITA for refusing to do anything around the house because my wife insisted on staying home with our child

















In the field of relationship dynamics, Dr. Reese Long is known for noting, “Financial agreements established under duress or during times of high emotional stress rarely hold up without explicit, continuous re-validation.”
The situation highlights a common breakdown in marital agreements following major life changes, particularly the introduction of a child. The OP initially agreed to an unsustainable work schedule (an extra 25 hours weekly) based on the explicit condition that his wife would manage all domestic labor. This condition was a form of compensation for the massive financial shift. When the wife demands help with chores while still being a stay-at-home parent (a role she chose), she is effectively attempting to renegotiate the terms of their original sacrifice-based contract without acknowledging the extreme cost the OP is paying through physical exhaustion.
The wife’s shift from adherence to breaking the promise, followed by employing the silent treatment, suggests potential difficulty in managing the role change or an attempt to exert control over the OP’s limited free time. The OP’s firm refusal to help with housework, while emotionally charged, is an attempt to enforce the boundary that was established. A professional recommendation would be for the couple to immediately halt all conflict and schedule a formal meeting, not to argue about dinner, but to redefine the entire structure of responsibilities, recognizing that the OP’s 70-hour work week means he has virtually zero capacity for additional labor.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

























The OP is currently experiencing significant resentment because the financial sacrifice he agreed to, which involved taking on a grueling work schedule, is now being compounded by his wife reneging on her promise to handle all domestic duties. The conflict centers on the perceived breach of the foundational agreement they established when she resigned, causing him to feel that his efforts are unappreciated and his boundaries are being ignored.
The core issue is whether the wife is entitled to an equal division of domestic labor despite having given up her career income, or if the OP must continue to bear the entire burden of providing financially while accepting no help at home. Should the OP uphold the original agreement strictly, or is it time for a renegotiation of responsibilities given the extreme hours he is working?







