In the quiet hum of their shared life, a delicate balance held their world together—a devoted mother weaving the fabric of their home with tender care, and a father steadfastly supporting their dream. Their six-month-old daughter, the heartbeat of their days, brought both joy and exhaustion, especially as sleepless nights tested the limits of love and endurance.
Now, as the baby’s cries pierce the fragile night, the father faces a new call to action—a plea from his wife for shared strength and sacrifice. The gentle rhythm of their weekend routine teeters on the edge, demanding a deeper understanding and a willingness to awaken not just in body, but in spirit, for the family they cherish most.

AITA for asking for a morning off from my baby on the weekends?













As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a breakdown in establishing sustainable boundaries around rest and shared responsibility during a period of extreme stress, specifically the infant sleep regression.
The OP and his wife have a functional but highly specialized division of labor: the wife manages all household and infant physical care during the week, supported by the husband’s financial contribution. While this arrangement benefits them generally, the night-waking duty during the sleep regression is inherently asymmetrical because the wife is the sole provider of night feedings. Her exhaustion is compounded by her existing insomnia, making daytime naps less effective recovery tools than uninterrupted sleep would be for the OP. The OP’s desire to use his weekend morning hour for leisure (videogames) rather than recovery sleep reveals a miscalculation of the severity of his wife’s deficit. His exhaustion from work and school, while real, is different from the acute, cyclical sleep fragmentation experienced by the primary night caregiver.
The OP’s request to equally share the weekend morning advantage is understandable from a desire for fairness in leisure time, but it is currently inappropriate given the imbalance of night labor. A more constructive approach involves implementing an immediate, temporary ‘sleep banking’ strategy. This could mean the OP takes over all baby duties for a dedicated, uninterrupted block of time (e.g., 4-6 hours on one weekend day) so the wife can achieve restorative sleep, rather than just a single hour. This shifts the focus from ‘equal time off’ to ‘meeting critical needs’ until the sleep regression passes.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.


































The original poster (OP) finds himself in a conflict where his desire for dedicated personal time, specifically an extra hour of sleep on weekend mornings, clashes directly with his wife’s urgent need for restorative rest due to severe sleep deprivation caused by night feedings and insomnia during a baby sleep regression.
Given the established division of labor and the current intense demands of infant care, is the husband wrong to insist on splitting the weekend morning sleep advantage, or is the wife correct in prioritizing her inability to compensate for lost night sleep during the day over his desire for leisure time?







