I was a husband who spent 5 years taking care of my dear wife 24/7/365, unfortunately she was not really able to do much around the house, but I know how to cook, do laundry and just about any other household task that needed attention.
I find this VERY sexist. I am a very loving nurturing MAN. From the time my first was born we traded every other night taking care of the baby. I did this for all three of my children. Later, my ex-wife traveled a lot for business. I cooked, cleaned, dropped off, picked up...basically Mr. mom. BTW, I do not think this makes me any less of a man. Just the opposite. I am very comfortable in my manhood to be able to do this. With ESRD I still care for my 3 children as I fought for and won custody of them. It is a little off topic yet I believe relevant to the conversation.
sorry Aaron and I are having some issues ourselves....the only person you can count on is yourself....
Yep, you're right. It IS sexist, absolutely. But I find it very interesting that you would speak in terms of being "less than a man" and "very comfortable in my manhood to be able to do this." I sense some defensiveness here, and I am wondering why. I happen to agree with you that being loving and nurturing doesn't make you un-manly, but that you would point this out sort of illustrates my point. Do you think other men would see you as unmanly?
I read a lot of posts here from women who do so much for their husbands who have esrd. What do married women do who are the ones who have ESRD?