**My Husband Never Replaces Things He Breaks and Leaves the Mess for Me**
It’s such a small habit on the surface, but it eats away at me. My husband breaks things—dishes, tools, electronics, even furniture—and never replaces them. He just shrugs, leaves the mess, and somehow it always becomes my responsibility to deal with.
It started early in our marriage. One night he dropped a glass, muttered, “Oops,” and went back to watching TV. I swept up the shards because someone had to. Then it was a lamp he knocked over while horsing around with our dog. He tossed the broken pieces into a box and said he’d “get around to it.” The lamp is still in that box, years later.
But the breaking point came last month. He forced a cabinet door open after it got stuck, snapped the hinge clean off, and then walked away like nothing happened. Every time I went into the kitchen after that, the door sagged and banged against the counter. When I asked him to fix it, he laughed. “You’re better at that stuff than me.”
I snapped. “Better at it, or just the only one who cares enough to clean up after you?”
He frowned, like I was making a big deal out of nothing. “It’s just a door. Why are you so dramatic?”
Because it’s not just a door. It’s every glass, every chair leg, every shelf, every thing he’s broken and walked away from while I’m left holding the pieces.
That night, instead of fixing the cabinet myself, I left it. Days went by, and the kitchen became a nightmare to use. Finally, after he banged it open one too many times, I looked him in the eye and said: “From now on, if you break something, *you* deal with it. If you don’t replace it, it stays broken. If you don’t clean it, it stays dirty. I’m done being your maid.”
He rolled his eyes, muttered something about me being “overly sensitive,” but when he went to make coffee and couldn’t get the cabinet open, he didn’t have a choice. He had to fix it himself.
Here’s the truth: love isn’t about cleaning up every mess someone makes—literally or figuratively. If he wants to treat our home like it’s disposable, then he can live with the cracks and clutter. But I won’t carry the burden for him anymore.