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She Worked Part-Time for Years and Her Husband Still Asked What She Does

by Carolyn Mullet
January 4, 2026
in Social Issues

A simple question about work turned into a fight neither of them expected.

After nearly two decades of marriage and five kids, this couple had settled into a familiar rhythm. He worked long hours as the main breadwinner. She carried the weight of homeschooling, domestic labor, budgeting, and quietly added a part-time remote job to keep the family financially steady.

From the outside, things seemed to function. The mortgage kept shrinking. Vacations still happened. Christmas stayed magical for the kids. But underneath that balance sat something far more fragile, a growing sense of being unseen.

For two years, she worked twenty hours a week in IT, from home, squeezing her job into an already overloaded schedule. She tried to explain what she did. Each time, the conversation went nowhere. He changed the subject. He shrugged. He moved on.

Then one day, when layoffs became a possibility, he suddenly wanted details.

That single question opened the door to years of frustration, hurt, and burnout that had never been fully addressed.

Was she wrong for snapping back instead of explaining again?

Now, read the full story:

She Worked Part-Time for Years and Her Husband Still Asked What She Does
Not the actual photo

'AITAH for not telling my husband what I do for work?'

Hi Reddit, I am newer here (I read a lot of Reddit posts, but don't post myself). I will give some background.

My husband (40M) and I (38F) have been married for 18 years with 5 kids, ages 15 to 5.

He is the main breadwinner, and I am a mostly SAHM (I homeschool our kids and do 99% of the domestic labor)

though I also work 20 hours from home for a small business for the past two years.

For context, my husband makes a good living, but has felt that we need to pay off our house more aggressively, though he also enjoys going on nice vacations.

Since I do all of the budgeting, with this economy and with having five growing kids, his salary covered our basic needs plus a little extra,

but he felt that we needed to figure out a way to have more money come in or cut back our spending. Two years ago, things really came to a...

and even though I was o__rwhelmed at home with everything, I decided to start looking for online work.

I ended up finding a wonderful position that was remote for a small company that was part-time (20 hours per week).

My working made it so that I was able to take half of my salary to put extra towards the mortgage, and the extra half towards vacations/Christmas.

This has worked well the past two years financially for us. However, when I started my new job, my husband didn't really seem interested,

though he asked me how I would have time with all the stuff with the kids and the house. I told him I would find the time, and he just...

Every time I have tried to explain what I do for work to him, he changes the subject, ignores me, or tells me that he doesn't get it (I work...

Today, I was talking to him on the phone, and he randomly asked me about the company since I mentioned some budget cuts when I was on the phone to...

He asked me if I was worried about my job in the future, and I told him that I wasn't super worried,

but that there was a possibility I would be laid off in the new year, depending on profit margins. He then said, "What is it that you even do, anyway?"

This is where I might be the AH. I sighed and told him that I've tried to tell him on multiple occasions, and that he never cared before so why...

He got defensive, saying that he is asking now, and that he didn't need a lecture from me. I told him that I wasn't lecturing him,

but that I was hurt that he has never shown interest or seemed to be appreciative of the extra income that my job brings in.

I told him that it's kind of insane that he doesn't know what I even do for a living.

He got mad, and said that it wasn't okay for me not to tell him what I do for a living, and that I'm keeping secrets from him.

Then I got mad, and told him that if he just listened, there wouldn't be any secrets.

He said that he is an adult who doesn't need to be lectured and attacked, and that if I wasn't going to tell him what I do for work, then...

He then hung up the phone. I tried to call him back, but he is now refusing to answer my calls or texts.

I was really mad at first, but now I am wondering, AITAH for not just telling him? It's not a secret.

I told him about it before, but I honestly just don't feel seen by him in most of the work that I do, whether it is around the house or...

UPDATE: Thank you all for the opinions and responses. To answer a few common questions: no, I'm not in OF.

I didn't even know what that was until I googled it, and then laughed hard. lol. Also, to clarify, YES, I have told him before what I had done multiple...

I feel like a lot of people missed that in the first post.

He did call me back a little while ago (he works long days, and some times I don't see him until very late at night), and he apologized.

He said he did remember what I had told him before, but couldn't remember the specifics at that second. I apologized for overreacting, and told him I feel burned out.

He apologized and said that he also was frustrated with something else at work and took it out on me.

For those people saying our relationship is doomed, we're going to prove you wrong. :) We did talk about going to counseling (we went years ago),

and think it would be good since we obviously both need to work on communication and making each other a priority.

He also told me that if my job does end or if I'm too o__rwhelmed and want to quit, that paying off the house is just something that would be...

He even mentioned maybe lessening the house payment to bring in a house cleaner once a month (or more) to help me with how much I have on my plate.

Truthfully, I think we have both been o__rwhelmed. He really is a great guy, and I think that we both have been so busy with life that we have forgotten...

I did tell him about this post (he loves Reddit), and he said, "I bet I was the AH because I was acting like one."

I told him that it was kind of split, and he said he was definitely the AH because he wouldn't answer the phone.

He did clarify that he couldn't answer a good part of the day though (he was in a meeting so his phone was on silent), so that made sense too....

This story feels familiar to anyone who has carried invisible labor for years. The fight was never about the job title. It was about being heard, valued, and recognized. When effort goes unnoticed long enough, even small moments can crack under pressure.

That emotional disconnect is where expert insight becomes useful.

At its core, this conflict reflects a common long-term relationship pattern, emotional labor imbalance paired with communication fatigue.

According to the American Psychological Association, chronic burnout often stems from prolonged imbalance between effort and recognition, especially in caregiving roles.

Stay-at-home parents who also work part-time face unique stressors. Research from Pew Research Center shows that women still perform the majority of unpaid labor, even in dual-income households.

In this case, the wife carried homeschooling, household management, budgeting, and supplemental income. Over time, that load created emotional exhaustion. When her husband dismissed or ignored conversations about her work, it reinforced the sense that her contributions mattered only when they affected finances.

Dr. Jessica Higgins, a licensed marriage therapist, explains that repeated conversational shutdowns can cause partners to emotionally withdraw. “When someone repeatedly feels unheard, they stop offering explanations because it feels pointless,” she notes.

The husband’s sudden interest appeared when job security came into question. From a psychological standpoint, this shift can feel transactional rather than relational. His concern focused on potential loss, not curiosity or appreciation.

Experts recommend several steps couples can take in similar situations.

First, rebuild conversational safety. Both partners must listen without interrupting or minimizing feelings.

Second, name invisible labor explicitly. Listing tasks helps validate work that often goes unseen.

Third, address burnout before resentment hardens. Counseling can help translate frustration into understanding rather than blame.

The positive turn in this story matters. Apologies were exchanged. Counseling was discussed. Practical solutions like hiring help were considered. These actions align with research showing that acknowledgment and accountability repair trust more effectively than defensiveness.

The deeper message remains clear. Communication is not just about information sharing. It is about presence.

Check out how the community responded:

Many readers focused on emotional neglect, noting how dismissive behavior erodes connection over time.

sillylilgooseberry - I cannot imagine a marriage where my spouse does not know what I do. That level of disinterest hurts.

corvus_corone_corone - This escalated because neither of you felt heard. It became about resentment.

Another group emphasized burnout and unequal labor, calling out the imbalance directly.

FriendlyMum - You are doing too much. Your mental health matters and this needs counseling.

live2begrateful - Homeschooling five kids plus work and house labor is massive. You are not the problem.

Otherwise_Chemist920 - Burnout is inevitable in this setup. Something has to change.

Some commenters used humor or blunt honesty to highlight the absurdity of the situation.

Briscogun - Two years and he just asks now? That says everything.

Barbihardt - I would have joked I sell feet pics and hung up.

Pale_Distribution141 - It is disrespectful that he never asked how your job was going.

This conflict was never really about secrecy.

It was about years of effort going unnoticed and the emotional toll that creates. When one partner consistently carries invisible labor, even a simple question can feel like an accusation rather than curiosity.

What makes this story hopeful is how it ended. Apologies were offered. Burnout was acknowledged. Solutions were discussed. That matters more than who “won” the argument.

Long marriages do not fail from one fight. They strain from patterns left unexamined for too long. Recognizing those patterns early can prevent deeper resentment later.

So where do couples draw the line between being busy and being disconnected? How often do we truly listen, not just hear, the people we rely on most?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 4/15 votes | 27%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 1/15 votes | 7%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 7/15 votes | 47%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 2/15 votes | 13%
Need More INFO (INFO) 1/15 votes | 7%

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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