Marriage should be a partnership, but for one stay-at-home mom, it feels more like being an unpaid servant. With three kids underfoot, a fourth on the way, and a mountain of chores already on her plate, she’s finally drawn a line: she won’t be making every meal for her husband anymore.
Instead of showing understanding, her husband has accused her of being a “horrible wife” and insists that cooking for him is part of her “job.” Tired and overwhelmed, she turned to Reddit’s Am I the A**hole? community to ask if she’s wrong for refusing to serve him hand and foot.
One overwhelmed mom drew a line when her husband demanded she make all his meals, dismissing her pregnancy and parenting workload







OP, a pregnant mother of three, is expected by her husband to handle every aspect of domestic life (childcare, housework, school runs, and his meals) because she doesn’t have a paid job. When she refuses to make him dinner, he calls her a “horrible wife,” dismissing the exhaustion and labor of full-time caregiving. His stance is clear: unpaid work doesn’t count, even though his household literally runs on it.
The husband’s argument, “life’s tough, this is your job”, reflects a common double standard. Paid labor is recognized and valued, while domestic work, overwhelmingly performed by women, is trivialized.
Yet economists estimate that if stay-at-home parents were paid for their labor, their work would be worth over $178,000 annually in the U.S. (Investopedia). Cooking, cleaning, childcare, scheduling, and emotional support are not hobbies; they are skilled, time-consuming roles without which families collapse.
Psychologist Dr. Darcy Lockman, author of All the Rage: Mothers, Fathers, and the Myth of Equal Partnership, puts it bluntly: “The unpaid work that women do is invisible, yet it’s the foundation of everything else. When men dismiss it, they dismiss their partners’ humanity.” Her words directly apply here. OP’s husband isn’t just undervaluing her time, he’s erasing the effort that sustains their family.
So what’s the way forward? OP isn’t wrong to draw a boundary. A fairer approach could include dividing household responsibilities after his work hours, or at minimum expecting him to handle his own meals.
If he truly believes she’s “not working,” then perhaps a structured breakdown of her daily tasks, or even a week where he manages the house and children alone, would clarify the scale of her labor. Couples counseling may also help reframe the imbalance as a partnership issue, not a personal failing.
At its heart, this isn’t about who makes dinner. It’s about whether OP’s contribution to the family is respected. Her refusal wasn’t laziness or spite. It was a necessary stand for recognition. Until her husband sees that, he’s not just neglecting chores, he’s neglecting his partner.
See what others had to share with OP:
These Redditors slammed his entitlement















Some urged her to make him experience her workload for a week







This group questioned why she’s having more kids with such a dismissive partner






This Redditor’s refusal to cook every meal isn’t rebellion, it’s a cry for respect in a marriage buckling under unfair expectations. Her husband’s dismissal of her grueling work as a pregnant SAHM reveals a deeper lack of partnership.
Was she right to put her foot down, or should she keep the peace for the family’s sake? How would you handle a partner who treats you like hired help? Share your thoughts below.








