AITAH for telling my wife that the whole family is catering to her stress because she goes to bed at 6 PM every single day?

A wife heads straight to bed at 6 PM every day, no exceptions, even on weekends. Meanwhile, the kids are still buzzing with energy, and her husband is left managing the entire evening alone from cleanup and second dinners to bedtime routines that stretch until 9 PM. She starts her day at 6 AM, handles a part-time job, picks up their daughter early afternoon, and prepares dinner by 3 PM before disappearing upstairs to watch shows on her phone.

He finishes his full-time remote work around 4 PM, drives their daughter to a packed schedule of lessons and activities, then steps in as the sole parent for the night. He’s repeatedly asked her to stay downstairs a little longer, even if she’s just lounging on the couch, but she insists it’s his unstructured parenting that’s the issue. This growing disconnect has him questioning everything, including his fading feelings for her.

‘AITAH for telling my wife that the whole family is catering to her stress because she goes to bed at 6 PM every single day?’

Their days run on completely different rhythms, with her starting early and ending long before the family night kicks in:

Wife gets up a 6am. I get up around 7am. She works 30 hrs a week, picks up daughter on the way home at 2pm. I work from home, 40hr...

I stop working at around 4pm. We both do our share of things around the house. Additionally I take daughter to music lessons, ballet, cheerleading and horse riding (4x a...

Once evening arrives, she fully withdraws from everything downstairs:

Problem is: wife goes to bed at 6pm. Every day, without exception. Saturdays and Sundays are often in bed. She's on the phone watching movies. I "do" the evenings, kids...

Because she makes dinner at 3pm, they're usually hungry again. Then they need to go to bed. Often they want to connect with me. My day finishes late. They make...

Her absence during prime family hours leaves him deeply frustrated:

I am upset because she's just not present. I feel like a single father in the evenings. And I believe the children need both parents present at night. Not supervising....

The kids have space to play in their rooms, together, do homework or whatever and have parents that are close but not distant or suffocating. Maybe we can make dinner...

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He’s tried talking about it multiple times, but it hasn’t changed anything:

I've mentioned this many times that I feel alone in this. She thinks it's because I'm hopeless and I want to be the kids' "cool dad" and I am not...

I also feel alone at night and I need 15 mins of her time to connect and not co-parent as roommates. (All I am asking is just for her to...

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This shift in her behavior has taken a serious toll over the years:

She wasn't like this while we were dating. It's gotten so bad in the last few years and I'm losing my admiration and love.

AITAH? I told her everyone is catering around her stress. It's not about doing more, it's about being present more. She refuses to budge and tells me it's because of...

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Sudden and extreme changes in sleep patterns, especially retreating to bed for hours while avoiding family interaction, can point to underlying issues like exhaustion or mental health struggles. Many professionals note that escaping into isolation this way often serves as a coping mechanism when someone feels overwhelmed, even if it looks like avoidance from the outside.

Psychologist Dr. John Grohol, founder of Psych Central, has observed that drastic shifts in routine paired with social withdrawal in the home frequently signal depression or burnout. People in this state aren’t necessarily being lazy—they’re often trying to shield themselves, though in ways that strain relationships (source: Psych Central articles on parental depression symptoms).

On the other hand, consistently opting out of evening family time while expecting a partner to cover everything can feel unfair, especially when kids benefit from both parents being accessible during those winding-down hours. Society tends to value shared presence over just splitting chores evenly.

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The most constructive path usually starts with a calm, non-accusatory conversation, ideally with a couples counselor present to keep things productive. Expressing worry instead of frustration—”I’m concerned about you and how we’re drifting”—opens the door better. If mental health seems involved, encouraging individual therapy first can help, while small adjustments like later dinners and defined evening shifts might ease immediate tension for everyone.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most people online were stunned by the strict routine and felt it effectively turns the husband into a single parent every night:

ThisWeekInTheRegency - 3pm dinner is ridiculous. Of course the kids will be hungry again. She's not holding up her end of the parenting bargain. NTA if everything is as you...

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jmlsarasota - I used to get up at 4am everyday for work. Dinner was 5-530, I went to bed at 9. What Mother gets to devote 12 hours to HERSELF?...

winterworld561 - 3pm is not dinner time. That's a late lunch. She clearly doesn't want to be around you and the kids if she goes to bed at 6pm. She's...

Your parenting style is completely normal. Hers in not. She doesn't do any parenting. Why are you even bothering with this marriage? It sounds dead and she checked out a...

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RabicanShiver - I would tell her marriage counseling or divorce. You're a single parent. That's not a marriage. She's basically going on strike and hiding it as going to bed.

CookieMama28 - Honestly, I’d consider divorce. Your wife is selfish, plain and simple. If therapy isn’t helping her, she’s doing it purposefully knowing you’ll pick up the slack. You and...

A few commenters suspected depression or burnout and urged professional help:

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Wise-Requirement2331 - This sounds like major depression. Your wife needs to see a professional asap.

bkkwanderer - I get up at 5:05 a. m. every morning for work Monday to Friday. The only time I would contemplate going to bed at 6p. m. is if...

Others believed she’s simply avoiding responsibility and advised the husband to push back harder:

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reallynotsohappy - I'm sorry I couldn't focus after going to bed at 6pm, but you said something like dinner at 3pm? This is so surreal. You are right in feeling...

I suggest, even if she cooks the dinner, don't serve it to kids (and yourself) until 5pm. Since you're the single parent, you decide the evening routine for your kids.

Sorry but at this point she shouldn't get a say. For the marriage, I think you need to have a conversation in presence of a neutral 3rd party, such as...

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Or if it's approved have her therapist mediate. I wouldn't accept my husband retiring to the bedroom every day to leave me all alone with the household tasks, and we...

Tiny_Distribution681 - I disagree with depression. She’s opting out of the tough bits of parenting because you permit it. Go away for a week and see how she manages.

Go out in the evenings. Split the evening shifts. She does 3, you do 4. At least you’ll get 3 nights a week off. Go to the gym. You’re responsible...

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This comes from a mother of 5 whose husband behaved like your wife does. I was a stupid martyr. Call her on it.

One commenter offered thoughtful, step-by-step advice about addressing the future of the marriage and possible mental health concerns:

WetPickleEater - This is heavy to deal with. I admire that you see that this isn't a healthy relationship for a family and try to figure it out. Because if...

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It's also the reason that both of you think that one is doing more than the other, because you two are not working as a team but living a separate...

It's starting to influence your kids because they don't see a healthy relationship between their parents, the kids misses their mother and it's starting to influence your feelings towards her.

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Try not to blame each other for things that are happening when you're talking. But try to figure out what is going on. It sounds like she has problems with...

If she starts saying this like you're hopeless (which is extremely disrespectful, but if she has mental health issue's she does this as a reflection of her own insecurity's) tell...

"That's not the problem and it's not something we're talking about now. We're now focused on our family as a team to make things better. " Hopefully it works and...

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But if she doesn't, you have to be clear to her that for the health of you, hers and most important the children you can't go on like this and...

And if things are not going to change that things will probably end between you two. Not today, not in a week, probably not within a month, but there will...

Explain to her that you will give her some time to think about the conversation and that you're there for her if she wants to talk about the problems and...

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Tell her you love her and end the conversation to give her some space. It will be a hard to confront her with such heavy words. But it will also...

Don't forget about your own feelings and hopefully she will open up towards you. If she doesn't after a while there is a chance that it's time to move on....

This is not something you repair within a day, it will take some time. But if you're starting to see effort or changes it will be all worth it.

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This marriage is stuck in a difficult place: one spouse craves shared presence and teamwork in the evenings, while the other shuts the bedroom door at 6 PM sharp. Whatever the cause—burnout, avoidance, or something deeper—the setup is gradually pulling them apart and leaving the children with just one parent after dinner.

What would you do in his position? Would you insist on counseling and small compromises, or does a non-negotiable early bedtime feel like the beginning of the end? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

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