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Dear Life Kit: I resent that my WFH partner has more free time than I do

Yossakorn Kaewwannarat
/
Getty Images; NPR

Have a question you want to ask Dear Life Kit anonymously? Share it here. For our next episode, we're looking for your queries on crushes or drama in the workplace.

Dear Life Kit is NPR's advice column, where experts answer tricky questions about relationships, social etiquette, work culture and more. 

This question was answered by marriage and family therapist Moraya Seeger DeGeare. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Moraya Seeger DeGeare is a marriage and family therapist.
Photograph by Nick Di Giugno /
Moraya Seeger DeGeare is a marriage and family therapist.

You are telling us right in the beginning that you pride yourself on your work ethic. So your sense of belonging, purpose and value seem tied to output. Even though your partner is bringing in a nice income, you're seeing him behave in a way that doesn't align with your values. His output isn't there. You've lost respect for your partner because work is how you respect yourself. So talk about self-worth with your partner. How does he define his value? For you, that's work. For him, it probably isn't. You have to respect that too.

Concerning your job, there's a lot of self-work to do. Your unhappiness with your partner may have to do with your unhappiness at work. In reality, you could probably work a little less. But it's scary to leave a job. Most of us will try very hard to avoid a big career move.

Next, take a look at your domestic workload. One partner is so burned out, and the other has so much time. Is the workload balanced between you two? Or do you have issues around gender roles at home and things getting done?

If you're overworking at work, you're probably overworking at home and in your relationships. Overworkers don't tend to ask for help at work — and probably don't ask for help at home either. So on top of a stressful job, you may be doing all the grocery shopping and the laundry and carrying the mental load.

There's a game called Fair Play that a lot of my couples in therapy play. You divide up all the household chores. You put all the things that need to get done in front of you. And you talk about them with your partner.

That could be an amazing place to start. Then the partner who wasn't seeing the work that needed to be done could realize, "Oh, I have time to knock these couple of things out in 30 minutes and still have all my free time."

Listen to Seeger DeGeare's full response to this listener's query, plus more questions like these, in our podcast episode "Dear Life Kit: I'm at my breaking point."


This story was written by Beck Harlan. It was edited by Malaka Gharib. The visual editor is Beck Harlan.

We'd love to hear from you. Email us at LifeKit@npr.org. Listen to Life Kit on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or sign up for our newsletter.

Copyright 2024 NPR

Andee Tagle
Andee Tagle (she/her) is an associate producer and now-and-then host for NPR's Life Kit podcast.

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