AITA for telling my wife to quit her job because she could do it with our sons instead?

What would you do if your spouse came home exhausted every day and kept talking about how tough work has become? Most people would listen, offer support, or maybe suggest ways to lighten the load. But one husband took a different path when his wife vented about her stressful job in social care — he suggested she simply quit and stay home full-time with their two young sons instead.

His reasoning seemed practical on paper: daycare eats up most of her salary anyway, and he could cover the bills with a few extra overtime hours. Yet his words hit a nerve, leaving her feeling dismissed and undervalued. Now the internet is weighing in, and the verdict is overwhelmingly clear.

‘AITA for telling my wife to quit her job because she could do it with our sons instead?’

The husband opens up about their family situation and the tension that recently boiled over.

For context me (M29) and my wife(F28) have been married for the past 4 yrs and have been blessed with two sons. Recently my wife has been complaining about the...

I work about 50-60 hrs a week whereas she works 40hrs a week and I have tried to increase the amount of home work I do over the weekends lately.

The problem for me lies in the fact that we take both kids to daycare which costs a pretty big chunk of our budget and is more or less 70-80%...

I make enough for all of us to be more or less in the same financial situation with a few more overtime hours a week if she quit her job.

And since she has been complaining recently when she started venting yesterday I told her she might as well quit and just take care of the boys, and id bump...

According to her I'm minimising her work and just not focusing on the real problem. I've tried to talk with her about why she doesn't want to just quit if...

He later added important context about her long-term goals.

Edit: It's my fault for not including this but a lot of people are assuming this is day to day venting, it isn't. She wants to pursue a career in...

ADVERTISEMENT

This situation reveals a classic clash between financial logic and emotional reality in modern marriages. The husband viewed the problem mainly through numbers — daycare costs versus income — while the wife experienced a much deeper issue: feeling overwhelmed, unheard, and stripped of professional identity. The disagreement escalated because one side reduced a complex life choice to simple math, ignoring the other’s need for recognition and autonomy.

The wife’s frustration likely stems from several layers. She chose social care as a career path and now wants to transition into digital marketing, meaning work gives her purpose, future prospects, and independence. Being told to “just stay home” can feel like having her ambitions dismissed, especially when she’s already carrying most of the mental and household load. The husband, meanwhile, may genuinely think he’s offering relief, but his wording (“whining,” equating her job to childcare) signals disrespect for her professional effort and personal goals.

Family therapist Dr. Eli Finkel, author of The All-or-Nothing Marriage, has emphasized that “relationships thrive when partners actively support each other’s personal growth, not just when they solve logistical problems.” In this case, the lack of curiosity about what his wife actually needs — beyond quitting — created a painful disconnect and eroded trust.

ADVERTISEMENT

The healthiest path forward involves real listening and shared problem-solving. The husband could start by asking open questions in a calm moment: “What would make your days feel more manageable?” or “How can we support your shift toward digital marketing?” Small steps like dividing household tasks more evenly, researching part-time options, or even funding short courses together would show genuine partnership instead of presenting a one-sided solution.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

The online community responded strongly, with the vast majority calling the husband out for missing the deeper emotional picture.

Many readers felt he completely dismissed his wife’s feelings and career value.

ADVERTISEMENT

Willing-Helicopter26 − Info: are you aware that she will find it hard to ever get back into the workforce if she decodes to stay home with the kids? Are you...

and which allocates a portion of money for her usage each month? You're asking her to give up her autonomy and rely solely on you. Why don't you ask her...

inFinEgan − YTA You are absolutely minimizing her job. She likely loves her job. She likely chose it and trained for it as her career. Complaining about it doesn't mean...

ADVERTISEMENT

I love my job, but it doesn't stop me from complaining about the bad parts. You're basically saying that if she doesn't love every aspect of her job, that she...

EDIT: Since OP came back with an edit, I'm going to put one of my own. There is no way he is doing this to help her find new work...

There is no mention of a new job. He only mentions that she told him that he was minimizing the importance of her job. His edit is self-serving BS designed...

ADVERTISEMENT

alien_overlord_1001 − YTA. Why is it 'her' income that pays for childcare? Why is it not 50/50 from both of you? This really annoys the crap out of me when...

You don't seem to understand the importance of having a job and earning your own money - maybe she doesn't want to be dependent on you, and have to ask...

Maybe she likes the interaction with other adults or just being out of the house without the kids - spending all day with small children on your own can be...

ADVERTISEMENT

Sure, we all vent about our jobs - that doesn't mean she wants to throw it in. She is venting about additional work outside of hours, a legitimate issue for...

A large group focused on how his suggestion would increase her burden while erasing her independence.

corgihuntress − She basically has the home load. You've "bumped" your workload up at home on weekends, but it sounds like she essentially has most of it plus her own...

ADVERTISEMENT

What she's asking for is for you to recognize that she's doing a lot more than she can handle and to help her with that.

Your response is for her to quit a job that no doubt fulfills her and allows her to contribute to your lives, lets her contribute to Social security and to...

You just told her her that her work is unimportant, it doesn't matter to you how she feels about having to do so much at home (emotional load and probably...

ADVERTISEMENT

and that you believe that she ought to give up her future in her career and abandon her hopes and dreams and just stay home.

You can just make up the difference in income by working more at the job you find fulfilling and dump more of the stuff she doesn't like and isn't finding...

You see, the work of home is more than a full time job and the fact that she does most of it means that she works two jobs and probably...

ADVERTISEMENT

Apart-Ad-6518 − YTA "I've tried to talk with her about why she doesn't want to just quit if she keeps whining about the job in the first place, but haven't...

Hardly surprising if you couched it in those terms. .. Complaining doesn't necessarily mean she wants to quit work. Maybe it would damage her career progression. Perhaps she doesnt want...

"According to her I'm minimising her work and just not focusing on the real problem. " So maybe ask her what the real problem is without labelling it as complaining...

ADVERTISEMENT

Others pointed out the long-term risks and the importance of mutual respect in the decision.

MediocreComment1744 − What I remind people who think 'all wimmin-folk should stay home with the babies for years'; If she quits, she will; A) lose years money paid into Social...

find it almost impossible to get back into the workforce at a compatible rate. Hubby can say, "I'll always take care of her" but people don't marry thinking they'll divorce....

ADVERTISEMENT

Huntokar_Goddess − Great, so you work 50-60 hours a week and your brilliant idea is to be away from your family even more? Do you not like spending time with...

This story highlights how easily financial practicality can collide with emotional needs and personal identity. Suggesting one partner quits without fully understanding what they value — independence, growth, adult interaction — can feel like a rejection of who they are, not just a budget fix. True support means tackling the real overload together instead of offering a solution that shifts even more onto the other person.

ADVERTISEMENT

When one partner vents, they usually want empathy first, not an immediate exit strategy. The lesson here is simple but powerful: listen to understand, not to solve on your own terms. What would you have said if your spouse came to you exhausted and overwhelmed by work? Would you push for them to stay home, or would you focus on lightening the overall load while respecting their career goals? Where do you draw the line between practical advice and minimizing someone’s feelings?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *