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New Mom Asks Her Own Mom To Watch Baby So She Can Shower, Husband Says She “Made Him Look Bad”

by Charles Butler
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

A Redditor’s attempt at a peaceful shower turned into a marital argument that hit right at the heart of new-parent exhaustion.

Newborns cling to their moms. They cluster feed. They cry when separated. But this mom’s situation had another layer: every time she tried to take a shower, her husband walked in, placed the crying baby into her arms, and left her soaked, stressed, and still unwashed.

Meanwhile, he continued taking his uninterrupted 30–60 minute showers every day. He said he “felt bad” hearing the baby cry, so he handled that discomfort by giving the baby back to her. After two weeks of this, she finally called her mom for help. She showered. She shaved. She breathed.

Then her husband stormed in and accused her of making him “look bad” because she didn’t tell him her mom was coming.

What was supposed to be a ten-minute act of self-care became a full argument about parenting responsibilities, emotional sensitivity, and the invisible weight new moms carry.

Now, read the full story:

New Mom Asks Her Own Mom To Watch Baby So She Can Shower, Husband Says She “Made Him Look Bad”
Not the actual photo

'AITA for having my mom come over so I could take a shower while she watched my newborn?'

My husband and I had a baby 2 weeks ago. She is strictly breastfed and not only does she cluster feed, but she also just finds comfort in being close...

There’s not much I can do without her and most of the time I’m okay with that. But I don’t get to shower by myself.

I’ve showered once by myself since having her, and it only lasted long enough for me to soap up before she was crying and my husband was bringing her in...

I think I literally had 2–3 minutes. My husband hasn’t had to change his life at all. Every day and nearly every night he takes 30–60 minute uninterrupted showers.

He doesn’t understand the frustration I get whenever he showers. I want to sit under the water and relax my muscles.

But every time I attempt it, the baby starts crying and he brings her in to me instead of trying to calm her down. He says it’s because he knows...

It feels like a cop out. So I called my mom and asked her to come watch the baby so I could shower and shave my legs. I’ve been attempting...

My husband was home when I asked my mom to come by. I didn’t tell him.

She shows up, takes the baby, and I go shower. My husband comes in and asks why my mom is here. I tell him I wanted to shower without the...

He says “I could have watched her, why would you do that?”

I told him “Every time you watch her while I shower, she ends up in here within 2 minutes because you don’t even try to calm her down.”

Now he thinks I’m an AH because I didn’t tell him to keep the baby out, and that I made him look bad to my mom.

This story shows how deeply new-parenthood can divide a couple. The mom isn’t asking for luxury. She isn’t escaping her baby. She’s asking for a basic human need: ten minutes to wash herself.

Her husband brings the baby to her every time she tries. Not because the baby is in danger. Not because something’s wrong. But because he can’t tolerate the sound of newborn crying.

That discomfort shapes everything. He hands the baby off so he doesn’t have to sit in the tension. She receives the baby because she always does. And the cycle keeps going until she finally calls her mom.

The moment he said she “made him look bad,” the real issue surfaced. He cared more about appearances than her exhaustion.

This is a very common early-parenthood pattern, and it needs attention before resentment grows.

Newborn care often exposes major gaps in a couple’s communication and division of labor. Many new fathers struggle with infant crying. The sound triggers stress, panic, and sometimes helplessness.

The University of Toronto published research showing that infant cries activate the same threat-response regions in the brain that respond to emergencies. But here is the critical piece: discomfort doesn’t excuse handing the baby off to someone else every time. Learning to soothe, comfort, and stay present is part of becoming a parent.

A common term for what OP’s husband demonstrates is “weaponized incompetence.” This refers to a pattern where one partner avoids responsibility by claiming they can’t do something, or by doing it poorly so the other partner takes over.

He doesn’t say the words outright, but the behavior is clear. He hands the crying baby to her because “showers calm her down” and because the crying affects him emotionally. This shifts the burden back onto the mother every single time. She never gets a break. He never learns to handle distress.

Child development experts say newborn crying is normal, expected, and not harmful when a caregiver is trying to soothe them. The American Academy of Pediatrics states that infants can safely cry for brief intervals while a caregiver works to calm them.

This means OP’s husband could hold the baby, rock her, bounce her, walk with her, or hum softly for five minutes while OP showers. The baby wouldn’t suffer. But his emotional resistance is blocking that effort.

Postpartum recovery adds another layer. Two weeks after birth, a woman is healing from major physical trauma. Whether she had a vaginal birth or C-section, her body is still raw, strained, and adjusting.

Lack of sleep, breastfeeding demands, and hormone shifts compound that discomfort. Self-care isn’t optional at this stage. It’s a medical necessity. Ten minutes of hot water on sore muscles can be the difference between coping and breaking down.

When the husband accused her of “making him look bad,” that revealed something deeper: he didn’t see the task-sharing imbalance. He saw the optics. He believed she embarrassed him by showing her mother she needed outside help.

But needing help is normal. Many couples rely on grandparents in the early newborn stage. What’s unusual is needing help because the other parent won’t hold a crying baby for more than two minutes.

Another important perspective is bonding. Research from Child Trends shows that fathers who soothe their infants regularly form stronger, earlier emotional bonds. Avoiding the crying delays that connection. It reinforces the idea that only the mother can comfort the baby, which becomes a self-fulfilling pattern.

Relationship counselors advise that early resentment can grow quickly after childbirth. When one partner carries the mental load, the emotional load, and the physical load, the partnership becomes uneven. The mother starts to feel like a single-parent while married. The father starts to feel excluded, even though his avoidance caused the imbalance.

OP calling her mom wasn’t an attack on her husband. It was a solution to an immediate need. The fact that he turned it into a personal insult shows he needs guidance, not defense. He must learn that newborn crying isn’t a crisis. He must learn soothing techniques. He must give his recovering wife space for basic care. And most importantly, he must see that parenting is shared work, not optional help.

OP isn’t the problem. The pattern is.

Check out how the community responded:

Husband caused his own embarrassment by refusing to parent.

angel9_writes - He made himself look bad to your mom. He needs to step up. He acts more like a baby than your baby. NTA.

solo_throwaway254247 - He’s not concerned about you. He’s worried about how he looks. That makes him an even bigger a-hole.

Mehitabel9 - Your husband is being a crappy partner and a crappy father. This is weaponized incompetence. Nip it now.

Many stressed that newborn crying is normal and husbands must learn to soothe.

katie-kaboom - The baby will be fine. She can cry for a few minutes. He needs bonding time.

SushiGuacDNA - He needs to learn how to comfort a crying baby. Sometimes you hold them while they cry.

MercifulOtter - He needs to learn how to be a father. Ask your mother to teach him soothing strategies.

[Reddit User] - He’s taking the crying personally. Babies cry. He pushes it onto you instead of coping.

Ok_Yesterday_2884 - He needs to adjust to being a dad. Take care of the baby so your wife can shower. And don’t call her an AH.

Commenters pointed out selfishness and immaturity.

[Reddit User] - He’s super immature. He should care for you and the baby. NTA.

QuietCelery7850 - Even with your mom there, he walked into the bathroom?

This story captures the moment many new moms face: when the need for ten minutes of rest clashes with a partner who never had to shift his routine. OP didn’t ask for a spa day. She asked for a shower.

Her husband chose to hand her the baby every time instead of trying to soothe her. He made the problem. She created a solution. And instead of seeing her exhaustion, he worried about how he looked to her mom.

Parents grow stronger when both partners take turns carrying the hard moments. Avoiding the crying only places more pressure on the person already healing from childbirth. OP’s husband has the chance to step in, learn, and support his family. But that begins with acknowledging how much she carries and giving her the space to care for herself.

So what do you think? Did OP do the right thing by calling her mom, or should she have confronted her husband first? And how should new parents handle the tension between emotional discomfort and shared responsibility?

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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