AITA (Am I The Asshat)?
Author
Discussion

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
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Quick one. Partner was made redundant late October, got a reasonable redundancy (not PH reasonable, real world- a few grand).
I didn’t expect for a second she would start looking for a new job before Christmas, and I didn’t want to hassle her in the new year, but last week I summoned the courage to ask how the job hunt was going. I was told the job market was tough, especially for a mature woman, AI is automatically filtering over 50’s out. That’s about it.
Today I found out she hasn’t even put her CV on Indeed, or had a proper browse. I found three possibilities within ten miles with a five minute search.
I get it’s her life to do with whatever she chooses, and her money to spend how she wishes; but I felt really disappointed that she’d done nothing at all. When I’ve been unemployed, I’ve made finding a job my (part-time) job. Because of family responsibilities, setting an example, paying my way, not dying of boredom.
I had a go at her, told her I was disappointed, and told her if she didn’t have a job line up by July, she could fk-right-off.
Am I the ahole?

Badda

3,633 posts

106 months

Monday 23rd February
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Yes

shirt

25,073 posts

225 months

Monday 23rd February
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Yes

I can expand if you wish but you don t meet emotion with logic.

ETA : this was before I read your last line. That’s worse than ahole behaviour imo. Hope she finds a new job and somewhere to live soon.

Edited by shirt on Monday 23 February 20:37

Mammasaid

5,319 posts

121 months

Monday 23rd February
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What they said, yes. HTH

LosingGrip

8,654 posts

183 months

Monday 23rd February
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Username fits.

Yes you seem to be. Is she covering her bills etc? If yes does it matter?

limpsfield

6,581 posts

277 months

Monday 23rd February
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Most definitely! Let her take her time.

Last Visit

3,337 posts

212 months

Monday 23rd February
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Grumbler said:
Quick one. Partner was made redundant late October, got a reasonable redundancy (not PH reasonable, real world- a few grand).
I didn t expect for a second she would start looking for a new job before Christmas, and I didn t want to hassle her in the new year, but last week I summoned the courage to ask how the job hunt was going. I was told the job market was tough, especially for a mature woman, AI is automatically filtering over 50 s out. That s about it.
Today I found out she hasn t even put her CV on Indeed, or had a proper browse. I found three possibilities within ten miles with a five minute search.
I get it s her life to do with whatever she chooses, and her money to spend how she wishes; but I felt really disappointed that she d done nothing at all. When I ve been unemployed, I ve made finding a job my (part-time) job. Because of family responsibilities, setting an example, paying my way, not dying of boredom.
I had a go at her, told her I was disappointed, and told her if she didn t have a job line up by July, she could fk-right-off.
Am I the ahole?
Maybe she's taken a confidence knock from being made redundant. Maybe there are other issues at play here.

To answer your question, yes.

gr86_driver

65 posts

17 months

Monday 23rd February
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I think you're right to expect her to contribute, assuming you don't expect her to work in addition to doing all the housework, cooking, shopping, childcare etc.

Having said that, in her shoes I'd be looking for the door because you obviously aren't a very nice person. Who on earth speaks to their partner in such a disrespectful way? I think she can do better.

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
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I just think partners have a moral obligation to do their bit. Not just burn through their redundancy, sitting around. I certainly wouldn’t feel comfortable not looking for work/working, when things need sorting. Regular bills ARE covered, nothing else.
But it seems I’m unanimously wrong. Fair enough.

Puzzles

3,265 posts

135 months

Monday 23rd February
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If she’s over 50 maybe she’s thinking of slowing down and retiring soon?

TameRacingDriver

20,149 posts

296 months

Monday 23rd February
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I was made redundant back in August, took me a long while before I was mentally ready to apply again. My experience over the last years was not good, so I needed a bit of downtime, not just to recover, but to decide what I actually wanted to do. When I was ready, I got back on the hunt, and now in a different job to those I'd had before, so for me it was worth the time off as I have something that looks like it suits me a lot more than most jobs. I think you are being harsh.

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
quotequote all
Thanks for the reply. I appreciate where you’re coming from. I was harsh, evidently too harsh, but the extra income would be very useful right now. The house is literally leaking. I’d consider that an incentive to at least look.

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
quotequote all
Last Visit said:
Maybe she's taken a confidence knock from being made redundant. Maybe there are other issues at play here.

To answer your question, yes.
I hadn’t really considered that. I’ve been made redundant twice and didn’t take it personally.

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
quotequote all
Puzzles said:
If she s over 50 maybe she s thinking of slowing down and retiring soon?
Chance would be a fine thing.

Grumbler

Original Poster:

378 posts

132 months

Monday 23rd February
quotequote all
LosingGrip said:
Username fits.

Yes you seem to be. Is she covering her bills etc? If yes does it matter?
I think it does. The redundancy money would go some way to cover other important (to her) things.

CHLEMCBC

1,239 posts

41 months

Monday 23rd February
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This is someone you love(d)? Get over yourself. Is she menopausal?

EDIT - misgendering was purely accdiental.

Edited by CHLEMCBC on Wednesday 25th February 13:55

StevieBee

14,862 posts

279 months

Tuesday 24th February
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CHLEMCBC said:
menopausal?
Women's logic can be mysterious to us men at the best of times. Menopausal and post menopausal it becomes a black art to fathom. All we can (and should) do is empathise.

Instead of finding jobs that she should have applied for and didn't and then moan to her about it, highlight them to her as some she might like to apply for - help her by signposting opportunities for her. Be a partner to her and support her rather than just observe her shortcomings and criticise.

If she fails to respond to that approach, you may receive a more sympathetic ear here.


ChocolateFrog

34,954 posts

197 months

Tuesday 24th February
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You went a bit nuclear at end there. yikes

Hard to row back from that.

Crumpet

5,035 posts

204 months

Tuesday 24th February
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Somewhere on Mumsnet there’s probably a similar thread where the respondents call the bloke a lazy waster for not getting out and finding a new job.

I’m not saying the OP is right (he’s not), but men are still expected to be the bread-winner. A lot depends on how the household is run, though. If she’s looked after the house and raised the kids while he’s developed a career it makes it a very different proposition to no kids and shared responsibilities.

Monkeylegend

28,464 posts

255 months

Tuesday 24th February
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If I was her I would be fking right off asap.