AITA for telling my wife I can’t always stop work to do things for her?

A work-from-home husband juggles school pickups, lunches, and his own pressing deadlines—and his wife expects him to drop everything to make her a sandwich on a busy morning. When he refuses, citing his busy schedule, she accuses him of prioritizing work over family before storming off.

What complicates the story is the uneven workload in the mornings: he wakes up at 6:30 to care for the kids while she sleeps in, but still feels guilty for protecting her work boundaries. This conflict exposes deeper issues about punctuality, gratitude, and who actually carries the day-to-day burden of the household.

‘AITA for telling my wife I can’t always stop work to do things for her?’

The family’s remote-work routine lets the husband manage school runs and start work seamlessly.

I've worked from home since 2020 when the COVID lockdowns closed my office, and my employer subsequently realized we could easily do our jobs from home without needing an office...

It works out very well because it allows me to take my kids to school in the morning, come home and start work and then pick them up on my...

A typical morning sees him up early prepping kids and often his wife’s lunch too.

A typical day looks like this: I get up at 6:30am and get the kids ready for school. I take them to school at 7:30am. I get home around 8:00,...

Most of the time, I also use that time between 8 and 8:30 to prepare lunch for my wife. Sometimes either she or I have packed something the night before...

One rushed morning after a lunch-bag detour, she demands he drop work to assemble her meal.

Today, I dropped my kids off at school when one of them noticed they forgot their lunch bag. We live fairly close, so I could go home, grab the lunch...

I had made my wife well aware that this week is going to be hectic and I will be swamped with work all week, so this shouldn't have come as...

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giving her just enough time to get dressed, do her hair, put on makeup, and head out the door. She has a history of having problems with punctuality and has...

She asked me to put her lunch together because she didn't have time, but I reminded her that I was swamped and literally couldn't spare a minute, much less the...

My job is very deadline-based, so there are times I need to be working on a certain task by a certain time, and it needs to be done. If I...

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I hold a senior position with 10 years at my company, so it's unlikely I'd be fired if I missed a single deadline, but it's not something I want to...

As she left, she said, "I don't know why you care so much about this company you work for; you should care more about your family." and then walked out...

I feel like that's unfair because I believe I have an excellent track record when it comes to caring about my family. I've often thought about asking her to be...

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but I never do because in the end I am glad she's able to get extra sleep before she heads to a job where she's on her feet all day....

The boundaries of working from home collapse when the family is always available, turning flexibility into endless shifts. The husband’s refusal is a defense of a role that already consumes childcare and meal prep before his paid work hours even begin.

His wife’s breakup weaponizes the rhetoric of “family first” while ignoring her own habits: chronic lateness and sleeping in thanks to his early wake-up. The move mirrors millions of dual-income households, where remote workers shoulder invisible work, then face guilt for hiding professional obligations.

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Counterarguments suggest that small things like a sandwich build goodwill in a marriage and barely disrupt workflow. But deadlines are not suggestions; missing one will cause a delay for a co-worker. The real solution lies in fairness—why not rotate morning duties or pack lunch the night before?

Socially, remote work blurs the boundaries inherent in the traditional office. “Remote workers report having higher expectations for family members’ availability, leading to increased conflict,” notes a Gallup 2023 Workplace Study (gallup.com/workplace). Clear communication and shared schedules will prevent resentment from developing into accusations of misplaced loyalty.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Most users rally behind the husband, calling out the wife’s entitlement and uneven load.

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your-mom04605 − NTA You sound like a great partner and parent. I think your wife is being unreasonable, she knows she’s being unreasonable, and is projecting that on you.

I think you two should have a conversation and let her know how unfair that was of her to say and how it made you feel, and things like that...

ScarletNotThatOne − NTA. She doesn't want to blame herself for her lateness, so you're the ready target.

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Careful-Bumblebee-10 − As she left, she said, "I don't know why you care so much about this company you work for; you should care more about your family. " and...

This is a wild thing to say when she sleeps through you getting your children ready for and to school and then make her lunch much of the time. NTA

Theia222 − NTA. Your wife is out of line. Lol 'caring about your family' does not include indulging your wife in packing her lunch especially since you do it for...

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Edit: per op his wife was awake but spent 30mins in bed on her cell. Yea. No, op, you're good. She can't even take 5mins out of her scrolling time...

yogginggirl − NTA. Your AM routine revolves around your family and prepping for work. Moreover, you kindly provided advance notice about an especially busy day. Sit down and have a...

A couple of replies push for balance, suggesting minor compromises while validating his stance.

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Huge_Many_2308 − Well no need to make lunch for her ever again. Let her deal with the kids in the morning for a week and see if her opinion changes.

Impressive_Moment786 − NTA-you don't have to make lunch for her, it is a kindness and shouldn't be expected. She is grown adult and capable of making her own lunch if...

I also struggle with punctuality. I would never expect my partner to miss something at work to make my lunch just because I can never seem to be on time.

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brit_brat915 − NTA, sis could have made her own meal or simply eaten out that day 🤷🏽‍♀️

Humorous takes lighten the mood without mocking either partner.

unbelievablefidelity − Why are you the only one getting up at 6 and tending to the kids? Why are you the only one driving them to school? If she works...

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Assprinkler − NTA she needs to grow up.

The husband’s track record of family support—from dawn patrols with the kids to voluntary lunch prep—makes his rare “no” reasonable, not selfish. Social network consensus labels him not the asshole, urging the wife to own her punctuality issues instead of guilting a partner already stretched thin.

Would you keep packing lunches after a comment like hers, or draw a new line? How do you split invisible morning labor when one partner works remotely?

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