When Resources Are Depleted: How to Cope with Burnout in a Family When Your Partner Is Unemployed and Living Off You You wake up already tired. Inside, there's a void, and on your shoulders, a weight that you can't shake off. During the day, you're at work, where you also need to "burn out." In the evening, you come home, where you're not welcomed with open arms — you're greeted with new bills, a shopping list, and the eternal question "What's for dinner?" And your partner, full of strength and health, for some reason, doesn't work. He lives off your money, shifts all domestic chores onto you, and at the same time, he manages to demand attention, care, and even new entertainment. The family's resources — yours and your child's — are melting away. And with them, your desire to live disappears. This is not just fatigue. This is burnout in its pure form. And if you recognize yourself, our article is for you. Why Burnout in This Situation Is Particularly Dangerous Professional burnout is bad, but burnout in a family, when you carry double the burden, destroys much faster. Your home stops being a sanctuary and becomes another place of work. You don't rest because no one takes the wheel for you in the evening. You're responsible for the survival of the family and have to put up with the fact that your partner is just a passenger in your life. It's especially worrying when your partner not only uses your money but also your time, strength, and even your child's emotional resources. This may manifest in him shifting the care of younger children to older ones, creating dependence, demanding constant attention from them, or manipulating them. In this case, the victims are not only you but also the child — his childhood is taken away from him, and he also gets involved in codependent relationships. The First Step: Acknowledge That It's Not Your Fault Many partners in such situations live with a sense of guilt for years. They seem to think they're "not good enough," that ...
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