In the quiet battle of parenthood, a father stands alone, shouldering the weight of sleepless nights and endless days while his wife remains distant, unable to share the burden. His love is tested not by external challenges, but by the silent absence of partnership in the most intimate moments of raising their two young sons.
Every morning and night, he becomes the sole guardian of their children’s routines, a constant presence in their lives as he juggles work and care with unwavering devotion. Yet beneath this steady exterior lies a growing ache—a yearning for balance, recognition, and the shared strength that once promised to unite them as a family.

AITA for Asking My Wife to Help with Our Kids Even Though She Says It’s My Responsibility Now?

















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this situation, the OP has clearly established a boundary regarding necessary support (needing help, even minimal help), which his wife is actively disregarding. Furthermore, the wife appears to be employing emotional manipulation and leveraging the threat of divorce and sole custody claims to justify maintaining the status quo.
The OP’s initial actions during the infancy stages (taking all night feedings due to pumping struggles) set a precedent that was difficult to correct later. While his accommodation was understandable then, it has devolved into a pattern where the wife has completely outsourced her parental responsibilities, even now that both children are in daycare. The wife’s defense—that mopping is physically taxing and that the OP ‘deserves’ exhaustion because of his custody stance—demonstrates a severe lack of empathy and a possible power dynamic where she feels entitled to significantly less labor. Her statement that she ‘doesn’t want the kids’ further erodes trust regarding her commitment to co-parenting.
The OP’s actions in demanding help were appropriate; a partnership requires equitable contribution, especially when both parties are employed or tasked with primary care. The OP should move beyond simply ‘asking’ for help. A constructive recommendation is to implement immediate, non-negotiable structural changes, perhaps involving a mediator or couples counseling to redefine roles based on actual capacity and mutual respect, rather than accepting the assertion that he ‘deserves’ burnout.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.























The original poster is experiencing severe exhaustion due to the highly uneven distribution of childcare and household labor within his marriage. His central conflict stems from his consistent efforts to fulfill parenting duties, including taking on all night wakings and most daily logistics, contrasted with his wife’s refusal to significantly increase her contribution despite stated agreements to help, leading to feelings of being unappreciated and overwhelmed.
Given the wife’s current stance—claiming the OP deserves exhaustion because he insisted on keeping both children in a hypothetical separation—is the expectation that the husband should continue performing nearly all childcare and household management reasonable, or does this imbalance constitute a severe breach of marital partnership that warrants immediate, structural changes?







