**I Work Two Jobs While My Husband Refuses to Work at All**
When my husband first lost his job, I was sympathetic. The company was downsizing, and he’d been a loyal employee for years. I told him we’d get through it together, that it was just a bump in the road. I picked up extra hours at work to help us get by, thinking it was temporary.
But temporary turned into permanent. Weeks passed, then months. He stopped sending out résumés. At first, he claimed he was “waiting for the right opportunity.” Then it became “the job market is too tough.” Eventually, he just stopped talking about it altogether.
Meanwhile, I was working two jobs—my regular full-time position during the day, and evening shifts at a local diner. I’d come home at midnight, exhausted, only to find him on the couch playing video games or binge-watching shows. The sink full of dirty dishes would greet me like a slap in the face.
One night, I asked him gently, “Can you at least help with dinner or laundry? I can’t do everything.”
He shrugged without looking up from his controller. “I’ll get to it later.”
Later never came.
The breaking point came last month. Rent was due, bills were piling up, and I was falling asleep standing up at work. I asked him again—pleaded this time—to start looking for a job. He looked me dead in the eye and said, “Why? You’re already covering everything. Why should I work a job I’ll hate when you’ve got it handled?”
My chest tightened. “Because this is supposed to be a partnership. Because I’m drowning while you sit there.”
He smirked, like I was being dramatic. “You’re good at working. I’m good at other things. You knew what you were getting when you married me.”
That night, I cried harder than I have in years. Not just from exhaustion, but from the realization that he didn’t even *want* to pull his weight.
The next morning, after a long shift, I came home to more dirty dishes, an overfilled trash can, and him sprawled on the couch like a teenager. Something inside me snapped.
I set my keys on the table and said, very quietly, “I’m done.”
He blinked at me. “Done with what?”
“Done with this marriage,” I said. “I will not kill myself working two jobs while you contribute nothing. I’m not your mother. I’m not your maid. I’m supposed to be your partner.”
For once, he didn’t have a comeback. He just sat there, speechless.
That night, I packed a bag and went to stay with my sister.
Here’s the truth: love doesn’t survive when one person does all the heavy lifting. Marriage isn’t about one carrying and the other coasting. And if he refuses to grow up and stand beside me, then I’d rather stand alone.