AITA for telling my wife I don’t care about my ‘internalized misogyny’?
A 28-year-old husband enjoys a month-long leave from work to care for their young child, but his wife repeatedly calls him a “house husband.” He asks her to stop, but she insists that this discomfort stems from his deep-rooted misogyny. Complicating matters further is her refusal to make a harmless joke despite his obvious discomfort, turning a light-hearted tease into accusations of bias.
This conflict reveals deeper concerns about roles, respect, and who gets to define identity in a marriage. One side sees playful banter; the other hears a disregard for his role as breadwinner. While finger painting bonds father and son, verbal criticism threatens the adult relationship within the family.

‘AITA for telling my wife I don’t care about my ‘internalized misogyny’?’
An unusual job schedule gifted the father extended time with his three-year-old.


The stay-at-home stretch sparked wife’s teasing about domestic titles.





The playful nicknames lose their humor when one of them keeps saying stop. The husband’s objection is not about the housewife’s debasement, but about her exact identity—he brings in most of his income through short-term corporate gigs, not daily housework. His wife’s insistence turns the boundary request into a moral failure, weaponizing trendy words to avoid responsibility.
Some argue that the discomfort with “househusband” actually reflects cultural baggage around masculinity and caregiving. However, the evidence suggests that he takes his role as a father seriously; proudly; the label simply distorts his primary role. To label him psychoanalytically when he is a little uncomfortable is to deny the realities of life and blame her for refusing to honor a simple request.
Society at large still values paid work, making the job of homemaker reductive for furloughed primary earners. Relationship therapist Esther Perel noted in the 2021 podcast “Where Should We Start?”: “The playfulness that one partner feels is a unilateral control disguised as a game. Respecting the other person’s refusal is the foundation of intimacy; everything else is negotiation.”
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
Plenty of users side with the husband, highlighting respect and accurate roles.








A few offer balanced takes, reframing the joke while validating boundaries.


















Light quips ease the tension without mockery.







The husband seeks basic courtesy—don’t call me what I’m not—while his wife turns compliance into ideological surrender. Community voices overwhelmingly prioritize mutual respect over forced humor, urging acknowledgment of both partners’ contributions without reductive labels.
Have workplace flexibility and childcare sparked similar nickname battles in your home? When does teasing cross into disrespect, and how do you reset the tone?
