45 Most Absurd Cases Of Weaponized Incompetence That Women Shared In This Thread
Interview“Honey, will you do the laundry? I just don’t know how you like it.”
“I can’t seem to find the vacuum, will you just go get it?”
“But if I mop the floors, they won’t be up to your standards!”
If you’ve ever heard similar excuses from your partner as to why they can’t do something, chances are you’re familiar with weaponized incompetence. And while this term may not be a part of everyone's vocabulary, plenty of people do know this frustrating experience all too well.
A few weeks ago, @Cooperstreaming on Twitter asked others to detail their most absurd experiences with weaponized incompetence, and plenty of people had examples ready to go. So below, you’ll find some of their most infuriating stories, as well as conversations with Cooper and Ann Park, MD.
This post may include affiliate links.
While the term weaponized incompetence was not coined until a few years ago, the experience and behavior is one many people have been familiar with for generations. Using excuses to get out of doing tasks someone else can do for you, or feigning ignorance when it’s time to wash the dishes, grocery shop or make dinner is a toxic behavior that far too many people view as harmless.
So to gain more insight on the topic, we reached out to board-certified psychiatrist, therapist and coach, Ann Park, MD. Lucky for us, Dr. Park was willing to shine a light on what exactly weaponized incompetence is. “Weaponized incompetence happens when one partner in a relationship is somehow unable to pull their weight, leaving the other person to do the heavy lifting,” she explained. “This can include managing household chores, completing work projects, or handling emotional responsibility in the relationship.”
If someone did this to me, I would smack them in the back of the head with a sock full of pennies.
While Dr. Park says there is no hard data available on how frequently weaponized incompetence occurs, it appears to be common, and people often immediately recognize what it is. “Weaponized incompetence tends to happen when one partner has difficulty setting firm limits, and the other partner steps into that gap,” the expert explained.
We were also curious how individuals should respond when their partner attempts to use this tactic to get out of doing something. “When you notice yourself feeling resentful or stressed about the balance in a relationship, pay attention to those feelings,” she says. “They are giving you important information. Take time on your own to identify the areas where you feel you're overworking. This can include emotional overwork. Then bring your thoughts to your partner and ask them to join you in creating a healthier balance. In a good relationship, your partner should be willing to step up to meet your concerns until you both find a mutually acceptable outcome.”
Hmmm… there are a few different methods here. Pull out his chest hairs with an old pair of pliers. Though, I will say, putting piranhas in his bath tub would be more effective. It is more pricey, but I would say it’s worth the investment.
Dr. Park also shared how we can teach people to stop using this kind of behavior. “Practice, practice, practice,” she told Bored Panda. “Just like any other skill, communicating your feelings and setting good boundaries around your personal limits takes practice. Start with a small step, and even rehearse ahead of time what you want to say to your partner. Then share your feelings, and be consistent about holding your limit in place.”
“Over time, both partners can learn to adjust to an equilibrium where each other's feelings and needs are consistently accounted for,” Dr. Park says. “It's the sign of a mutually respectful, healthy relationship.”
If you’d like to learn more about Dr. Ann Park or hear more words of wisdom from her, be sure to visit her Instagram page right here.
So sorry you married that lazy POS, and Good on you he's now you're ex.
Oh just go on top of the roof and look around, I'm sure you'll find the dishes spot. These rocks I'm gathering? It's for something else, don't worry about it.
We also got in touch with Cooper, the woman who started this thread, and she was kind enough to have a chat with Bored Panda about her own experiences that inspired this conversation. Cooper shared that she previously ended an engagement after noticing a pattern of weaponized incompetence.
“I realized his mother always stepped in to clean up his messes, and both he and his family expected me to step into that role,” she noted. “The breaking point was when he didn't file the paperwork necessary for our international marriage to be legal, saying it was too hard to make the phone calls and he didn't know what to do.”
“Eventually he had his mummy pick up the slack,” Cooper continued. “We were in our late 20's, the man knew how to Google and pick up a phone. Because we were citizens of different countries, timing was tight and getting paperwork done was vital to everything working. I remember this moment as the one where I realized that it didn't matter how important the situation was or how much was on the line, he would simply claim he didn't know how until I (or his mother) picked up the slack. He would let things fall apart before handling his life himself. I refused to marry into a lifetime of parenting this man, and shortly after this, I walked away.”
“When you love someone, you want to give them the benefit of the doubt. You naturally want to attribute good intentions. Sometimes people truly don't have experience and just need to be taught,” Cooper pointed out. “But eventually, it starts to become clear when someone throws up their hands and claims helplessness at every turn.”
“It also becomes highly suspect when an extremely intelligent person claims they simply can't learn how to do a very basic task,” she added. “If you're an architect, I'm sure you can learn how to turn on the washing machine.”
“These experiences are so disheartening. Because you expect that someone who loves you would not intentionally manipulate you and be perfectly happy to see you stressed and overwhelmed. It's hurtful to realize it's happening to you,” Cooper says.
Cooper went on to note that weaponized incompetence is manipulative by definition, and there are many reasons why someone might try to use this tactic, “ranging from selfishness and laziness to poor communication skills or fear of addressing your desires directly.”
“Some people know what they want would be rejected because it's unreasonable and bad partnership (eg: never having to change your child's diaper, never being the one to do the dishes), so they manipulate their way out of having to show up and do their part,” she continued. “Why put in effort when you've always been able to get by without giving any?”
That's all too typical as they get praised for every little chore they perform their entire lives, while women are criticized for not doing them well or more often instead.
Cooper also told Bored Panda that one story in particular from the thread stuck out to her. “One woman said her dad told her brother, right in front of her ‘Just pretend you don't know how to do laundry and your sister will do it for you.’ Despite the level to which this is predictable, it still somehow felt shocking,” she shared. “There are a lot of people who pretend they don't do this, or know anyone who does, and yet here was a man actively teaching his son how to feign ignorance to manipulate women into doing his work.”
“Rarely is it said so explicitly, but sometimes weaponized incompetence is directly taught. More insidiously, we see it modeled in the home. Kids pick up on everything,” Cooper added.
I assume he hand washes his clothes. Probably also cooks over a fire, too. /s
We were also curious what Cooper’s thoughts were on the responses to her thread. She noted that they ranged from “funny and sad to rage inducing,” but that most of them didn’t surprise her. “I knew that a lot of people, especially a lot of women, would have endless examples,” she noted. “There wasn't a commonly understood term for this behavior until recently, and now that people can put a name to it, they can recognize it when it's happening.”
“The worst story I saw was a woman whose boyfriend would use his nose when going down on her,” Cooper said. “He outright told her that he intentionally wanted to bother her and make the experience terrible, so that she would stop asking. What an absolutely horrifying person. I'd say I hope he learns, but honestly, I hope he just never gets laid again.”
“The funniest part of the response was the number of men who got extremely angry that I talked about it, because my tweet doesn't specify gender or even imply it,” Cooper noted. “There are people in the thread who are LGBTQ and relate these issues as well in non cishet relationships with people of any gender. But just bringing up the topic made several men very angry, and this issue does seem to be the most pervasive around domestic issues in cishet relationships. A hit dog will holler.”
Hey I've got a crazy idea: what if people worked in stores? That way you could ask someone already there.
As far as how we should respond when we realize our partners or loved ones are utilizing weaponized incompetence, Cooper says we have three options: do it for them forever, refuse to do it and let the consequences of their actions pile up, or leave.
“The only way to stop someone from ‘getting away with it’ is to refuse to accept the behavior,” she continued. “Recognize adults can and do learn new skills all the time. Pay attention to people who are perfectly intelligent at work but suddenly child-like at home. You can't force someone to do their fair share, but you can refuse to be with someone who treats you that way. If your life is bound to a person who thinks it's perfectly fine to saddle you with the majority of work that should be shared, it's okay to question if you still want that relationship. Any partner who will happily dump all the work and stress on you doesn't care about your wellbeing.”
“The best course of action is to let it be known early and often that you will not tolerate this behavior, and it is absolutely worth ending a relationship over,” Cooper says. “Either they will choose to carry their own weight, or they will show you through your actions that they'd rather lose the relationship than be an equal partner within it. Walk away.”
“I think it's helpful to first give the benefit of the doubt to friends and partners. It's important to be kind and wonderful to be willing to teach,” Cooper added. “But keep your eyes open for claims of ignorance that strain credulity. Your partner can learn to use the dishwasher and the washing machine. Your co-worker has made a spreadsheet before. Refusing to pick up the slack may feel counterintuitive and painful, but it's the only way to put the onus back where it belongs.”
If you’d like to learn more about Cooper, follow her on social media, or even buy her a cup of coffee, you can find her information right here.
And if you’re interested in checking out another Bored Panda article discussing weaponized incompetence, look no further than right here!
When we brought our first baby home from the hospital, I told my husband, "i don't know any more about this than you do. We will figure it out together." And we did. And our son's are not the a$$shats on this thread.
I would make him look in random wrong drawer, then when he says they're not there, "oh yeah, sorry, they're in the (some other but still wrong) drawer". And then I would tell him to check this cabinet, that cabinet... I would make him check all the wrong drawer, cabinets, etc. except for the correct one.
My dad has never in his life paid bills, filed taxes, used the washing machine or drier, folded clothes... And he's just learned to make appointments the last few years. At least he's cooking, but that's because he's a retired chef and likes it
Seeing the other idiots on this thread I'm glad that one even managed to pick a box and put something in it
Okay this one will really blow your mind. I hope you're all sitting down for this idea. What if instructions for microwaving were on the packaging already? Okay now breath, don't hyperventilate here!
That's exactly how he's gotten away with not doing them his entire life, my brother's did the same thing until my mom gave up and made dishes my chore every night.
No, you stop cooking because you don't have any clean pots and pans. Geez, I really appreciate my husband.
I knew someone with a mid-teenage son who wouldn't/couldn't learn to do his own laundry. He said using the washing machine was too complicated. My suggestion was to tell him that if he couldn't learn to run a washing machine, he certainly wasn't getting the driving lessons he wanted, as managing a car is a lot more complicated than running a washing machine.
Stories like these make me glad I live alone. I’d much rather just clean up after myself than have a partner and have to clean up after them as well
I'm so glad I found someone who cooks, cleans, does laundry and does grocery shopping. And I don't even have to ask!!! We take turns depending who is working when. We cook and clean up as a team!
My dad was/is a master of weaponized incompetence so I grew up with zero tolerance for it. Every time a soon to be ex pulled that c**p I immediately broke up with them letting them know “I’m sorry I must be super shallow but I just can’t date someone that stupid”. Im so happy I did to as my hubby is a fantastic PARTNER
I think it's beyond time for women to start using weaponized incompetence in the bedroom.
I see a lot of "my ex bf/husband" in there, but I could fill a book with my ex-girlfriend's bad habits, from not loading the dishwasher correctly (although lots of "hints" since half-full) to not tearing boxes for the recycle bin to not rinsing her toothbrush. Here's one: she would put her things (wallet, phone, keys) anywhere then forget where she put them. She would go nuts looking for them then blame me for not knowing where she put them, because since "I know she never take a mental note of it", I should pay attention where she put them so I could tell her. "You're useless" was her response when I said I didn't know where she put them.
I don't know if your ex had ADD or was just spoiled, but she didn't help her situation by dumping all responsibility on you and not appreciating you. I have an attention deficit, so my husband occasionally reminds me of what I need to do (example: "Do you have your ticket?"). Even if I remember, I still thank him (example, "I do, thanks for reminding me"). When I was growing up, my mother screamed a lot at me (I was also hit until I was 10). My husband's tone is calm, brief and very occasionally a little stern (such as "Did you finish your taxes yet?"). His way feels considerate, kind, and pragmatic.
Load More Replies...My parents have an agreed-upon story between them that "men just can't see dirt" and "men just aren't detail-oriented." That's why my mom has to do all the cleaning. I tried asking once, "Wow, if men aren't capable of seeing dirt or focusing on details, do you really think they should be allowed to be surgeons or engineers or presidents or anything with a lot of responsibility?" I got a blank look back.
Do some guys just not care if we think they're stupid? Is it really worth slacking on chores to have the person you married think you're incompetent?
I think it's just their way of expressing their internalized anger towards their spouse, and rather than growing up and dealing with their issues, they get angrier that their spouse thinks they're incompetent, and it becomes this whole vicious circle that usually ends in violence and or divorce.
Load More Replies...My ex just outright said "You do the cleaning - you're the one that cares if it's clean."
As a bloke and part of this 50.42% that are male I’m hanging my head in shame, men are dolts on occasions. My partner and I each have our own homes, when I’m at her home I am not a guest, I’m part of the family (she has two children), whatever needs to be done I do, I enjoy cooking for the group, it’s way better than cooking for myself so I’ll always offer / insist I cook, if there are chores then why wouldn’t I be involved? Yes she points me in the right direction, it’s her home and she has her own schedule that she keeps so I pick up whatever is next on the list. Why would you deliberately throw a spanner in the works? That’s incredibly selfish and short sighted! We each have our strengths, we each have jobs we enjoy more than others, equally there are jobs that just have to be done that neither of us like so the team crack on and get ‘em done. The sooner we are all done the sooner we get to enjoy a brew and a biscuit!
Glad to hear there are real men still out there.
Load More Replies...I refuse to date/cohabitate with someone who can’t do the basics. If I go over to a bf’s place and it’s dirty, disorganized, unwashed sheets- I’ll will be seriously reconsidering the relationship. I want to date an adult, not a man-child.
Speaking as a man, face it, we're not that great even when we're a lot better than in these stories. I think women should work a lot harder on the science of reproduction without men, and ditch us altogether
I find this comment very sad, in part because I agree. How did we get to this point that we men hate ourselves so much we wish our whole gender would disappear?
Load More Replies...You (almost) have to be in awe of the supreme self-confidence of some of these people. They think they're are so indispensable, so worshipped and adored by their partners, that no amount of bad behaviour will lead that partner to dump them. It must be an awful shock when the fed-up partner says "You know what? My life is easier without you. Goodbye."
It's encouraging that almost all of the examples are exes
Load More Replies...65 y.o. male here. I cannot believe that these ar**holes spout this c**p and (A) think that they'll be believed and/or (B) aren't utterly ashamed of their ignorance and selfishness, even if what they claim is true. And if any male has been in the military, be assured, they know how to do ALL of these things and more (except cook, maybe).
One New Year's Eve my bf and myself were supposed to go out with friends but during the day I had come down with a bug and was leaking out of various orifices and feeling horrifically nauseous so I didn't want any food at all. I was also experiencing severe stomach pain so I was curled up on the sofa with a duvet watching rubbish tv. My ex came home from work and sat on the sofa and asked me what was for dinner. I just said, you make whatever you want but I'm too ill to make anything and I'll likely vomit on it. He sat there sulking until 10pm when he said I don't know what I can use. I said everything in the fridge, freezer and cupboards is free for you to make yourself something to eat with. He sat there for another 30 minutes. He said can you not make me something? I said unless you want me to vomit or poop on it I'm not making anything. This guy has a degree in analytical chemistry and doesn't understand how to make food for himself. His mum had done everything for him.
He'd never lived alone or had to fend for himself. We broke up a few weeks later. I'm not a baby sitter. He eventually moved out of his mother's house into his own place and like I thought, it was the making of him. He learned so much and grew as a person. I'm still in contact with him and we are on good terms but I'll never have someone sulk like that at me because I wouldn't make him some food whilst I was really ill.
Load More Replies...Physicists have discovered that if you let a BP Man-hate Article touch a BP Karen Article, the two will self-annihilate and release a tremendous amount of usable energy. Possible fossil-fuel replacement.
The article was about weaponized incompetence. The people who posted examples included men, so...
Load More Replies...My mother in law is such an enabler, when we moved out she offered to do his ironing because I don't do ironing and when I mentioned in passing how hopeless he was at washing the dishes (cold water and food still on things) I was told I should just do them myself! She'd run rings around her boys providing for them, took me a while to hack off those apron strings!
The only good thing about this thread is that most of them are exes
My husband-off shift for 4 days while I was at work in the office, phoned me from home to ask what was for dinner with his head in the fridge. I suggested he get something out of the freezer for me to cook later. He got three bags out-chicken, pork chop and a piece of tuna. He said later I could make 'mixed meat surprise'!
My husband doesn't cook because he doesn't like it. But that's about it. I hate doing laundry, so that's what he does instead of cooking. And he pais to get out when I don't feel like cooking. I feel we have a very balanced relationship and I love him very much. Life is definitely easier for both of us together than it would be if we were alone since we're a team.
But that's a little different than purposefully doing something badly to get out of ever doing it again.
Load More Replies...Okay, so men in the West seem to be s**t, but my my ex-wife, of a 12 year relationship, had cleaned a toilet once, claimed the scrubber was defective, bought new ones, and then never cleaned them again.
the second time i put bra's in the dryer i was banned from doing laundry - except my own. didn't plan it that way but . . . . ok
I don't understand why women stay in relationships like that. Why date/marry someone who feigns incompetence to disrespect you? Men aren't children living in adult bodies. If they can't behave like an adult than it's probably a clear indication they shouldn't be in an adult relationship.
I could only read the first few of these before I had to stop because I'm so ashamed. 🫣
Where are the posts about women's weaponized incompetence? What's that? There aren't any!
Do you really think women NEVER pretend they don't know how to do something just so they won't have to do it?
Load More Replies...When I was in my early 20s, I was dating a girl who asked me to go grocery shopping with her. I did. Whenever I saw a product on the shelf that I knew the jingle for, I would sing it... at the top of my voice. 🎶 My Mommy loves me! How do I know? Because my Mommy tells me so! Mom brings Del Monte home! 🎶 She was SO embarrassed! I. Had. A. BLAST! It was SO fun! About a week later, she was going shopping. I said, "Do you want me to go with you? Can I come?" Her reply? "NO!! SIT! STAY!"
So...you're bragging about being one of these people?
Load More Replies...Plenty of women pick men who dont make lots of money or look good. Nice try, MRA troll, now f*ck off
Load More Replies...We don't care about user opinions, we are irritated by the constant stream of vitriolic, targeted attacks, especially when Bordepanda's whole purpose is ostensibly to provide "entertaining and amusing news." Boredpanda has no business loathing an entire sex and an entire country. If the users do so, that is completely understandable and impossible to prevent. If a significant portion of BP's published content, created by its administration, has this purpose, then dare I suggest a perversion of BP's purpose is occurring. If "AntiAmerican.com" does this, then that is understandable; that was its intended purpose. If "Funandgames.com" starts publishing article after article criticizing and laughing at an entire group and nationality, would that be appropriate, given the site's explicitly stated purpose?
Load More Replies...Admittedly, my mom does the weaponized incompetence thing, too. But in my 46 years on this earth most examples have been men. Women initiate 75% of divorces. There’s a reason for that statistic, and smart men take it to heart.
Load More Replies...Hello Anonymous, all men are not worthless. The fact that women accept the planned incompetence of the men in their lives is pathetic. I got divorced over twenty years ago and couldn't tell you who was more incompetent in my marriage. I do know reading stuff like this and other stuff about marriage shows me we all need to sit and start communicating with our significant others before we ever get married. If we learn to communicate before we get married, there just might be less divorces in the future.
Load More Replies...I knew someone with a mid-teenage son who wouldn't/couldn't learn to do his own laundry. He said using the washing machine was too complicated. My suggestion was to tell him that if he couldn't learn to run a washing machine, he certainly wasn't getting the driving lessons he wanted, as managing a car is a lot more complicated than running a washing machine.
Stories like these make me glad I live alone. I’d much rather just clean up after myself than have a partner and have to clean up after them as well
I'm so glad I found someone who cooks, cleans, does laundry and does grocery shopping. And I don't even have to ask!!! We take turns depending who is working when. We cook and clean up as a team!
My dad was/is a master of weaponized incompetence so I grew up with zero tolerance for it. Every time a soon to be ex pulled that c**p I immediately broke up with them letting them know “I’m sorry I must be super shallow but I just can’t date someone that stupid”. Im so happy I did to as my hubby is a fantastic PARTNER
I think it's beyond time for women to start using weaponized incompetence in the bedroom.
I see a lot of "my ex bf/husband" in there, but I could fill a book with my ex-girlfriend's bad habits, from not loading the dishwasher correctly (although lots of "hints" since half-full) to not tearing boxes for the recycle bin to not rinsing her toothbrush. Here's one: she would put her things (wallet, phone, keys) anywhere then forget where she put them. She would go nuts looking for them then blame me for not knowing where she put them, because since "I know she never take a mental note of it", I should pay attention where she put them so I could tell her. "You're useless" was her response when I said I didn't know where she put them.
I don't know if your ex had ADD or was just spoiled, but she didn't help her situation by dumping all responsibility on you and not appreciating you. I have an attention deficit, so my husband occasionally reminds me of what I need to do (example: "Do you have your ticket?"). Even if I remember, I still thank him (example, "I do, thanks for reminding me"). When I was growing up, my mother screamed a lot at me (I was also hit until I was 10). My husband's tone is calm, brief and very occasionally a little stern (such as "Did you finish your taxes yet?"). His way feels considerate, kind, and pragmatic.
Load More Replies...My parents have an agreed-upon story between them that "men just can't see dirt" and "men just aren't detail-oriented." That's why my mom has to do all the cleaning. I tried asking once, "Wow, if men aren't capable of seeing dirt or focusing on details, do you really think they should be allowed to be surgeons or engineers or presidents or anything with a lot of responsibility?" I got a blank look back.
Do some guys just not care if we think they're stupid? Is it really worth slacking on chores to have the person you married think you're incompetent?
I think it's just their way of expressing their internalized anger towards their spouse, and rather than growing up and dealing with their issues, they get angrier that their spouse thinks they're incompetent, and it becomes this whole vicious circle that usually ends in violence and or divorce.
Load More Replies...My ex just outright said "You do the cleaning - you're the one that cares if it's clean."
As a bloke and part of this 50.42% that are male I’m hanging my head in shame, men are dolts on occasions. My partner and I each have our own homes, when I’m at her home I am not a guest, I’m part of the family (she has two children), whatever needs to be done I do, I enjoy cooking for the group, it’s way better than cooking for myself so I’ll always offer / insist I cook, if there are chores then why wouldn’t I be involved? Yes she points me in the right direction, it’s her home and she has her own schedule that she keeps so I pick up whatever is next on the list. Why would you deliberately throw a spanner in the works? That’s incredibly selfish and short sighted! We each have our strengths, we each have jobs we enjoy more than others, equally there are jobs that just have to be done that neither of us like so the team crack on and get ‘em done. The sooner we are all done the sooner we get to enjoy a brew and a biscuit!
Glad to hear there are real men still out there.
Load More Replies...I refuse to date/cohabitate with someone who can’t do the basics. If I go over to a bf’s place and it’s dirty, disorganized, unwashed sheets- I’ll will be seriously reconsidering the relationship. I want to date an adult, not a man-child.
Speaking as a man, face it, we're not that great even when we're a lot better than in these stories. I think women should work a lot harder on the science of reproduction without men, and ditch us altogether
I find this comment very sad, in part because I agree. How did we get to this point that we men hate ourselves so much we wish our whole gender would disappear?
Load More Replies...You (almost) have to be in awe of the supreme self-confidence of some of these people. They think they're are so indispensable, so worshipped and adored by their partners, that no amount of bad behaviour will lead that partner to dump them. It must be an awful shock when the fed-up partner says "You know what? My life is easier without you. Goodbye."
It's encouraging that almost all of the examples are exes
Load More Replies...65 y.o. male here. I cannot believe that these ar**holes spout this c**p and (A) think that they'll be believed and/or (B) aren't utterly ashamed of their ignorance and selfishness, even if what they claim is true. And if any male has been in the military, be assured, they know how to do ALL of these things and more (except cook, maybe).
One New Year's Eve my bf and myself were supposed to go out with friends but during the day I had come down with a bug and was leaking out of various orifices and feeling horrifically nauseous so I didn't want any food at all. I was also experiencing severe stomach pain so I was curled up on the sofa with a duvet watching rubbish tv. My ex came home from work and sat on the sofa and asked me what was for dinner. I just said, you make whatever you want but I'm too ill to make anything and I'll likely vomit on it. He sat there sulking until 10pm when he said I don't know what I can use. I said everything in the fridge, freezer and cupboards is free for you to make yourself something to eat with. He sat there for another 30 minutes. He said can you not make me something? I said unless you want me to vomit or poop on it I'm not making anything. This guy has a degree in analytical chemistry and doesn't understand how to make food for himself. His mum had done everything for him.
He'd never lived alone or had to fend for himself. We broke up a few weeks later. I'm not a baby sitter. He eventually moved out of his mother's house into his own place and like I thought, it was the making of him. He learned so much and grew as a person. I'm still in contact with him and we are on good terms but I'll never have someone sulk like that at me because I wouldn't make him some food whilst I was really ill.
Load More Replies...Physicists have discovered that if you let a BP Man-hate Article touch a BP Karen Article, the two will self-annihilate and release a tremendous amount of usable energy. Possible fossil-fuel replacement.
The article was about weaponized incompetence. The people who posted examples included men, so...
Load More Replies...My mother in law is such an enabler, when we moved out she offered to do his ironing because I don't do ironing and when I mentioned in passing how hopeless he was at washing the dishes (cold water and food still on things) I was told I should just do them myself! She'd run rings around her boys providing for them, took me a while to hack off those apron strings!
The only good thing about this thread is that most of them are exes
My husband-off shift for 4 days while I was at work in the office, phoned me from home to ask what was for dinner with his head in the fridge. I suggested he get something out of the freezer for me to cook later. He got three bags out-chicken, pork chop and a piece of tuna. He said later I could make 'mixed meat surprise'!
My husband doesn't cook because he doesn't like it. But that's about it. I hate doing laundry, so that's what he does instead of cooking. And he pais to get out when I don't feel like cooking. I feel we have a very balanced relationship and I love him very much. Life is definitely easier for both of us together than it would be if we were alone since we're a team.
But that's a little different than purposefully doing something badly to get out of ever doing it again.
Load More Replies...Okay, so men in the West seem to be s**t, but my my ex-wife, of a 12 year relationship, had cleaned a toilet once, claimed the scrubber was defective, bought new ones, and then never cleaned them again.
the second time i put bra's in the dryer i was banned from doing laundry - except my own. didn't plan it that way but . . . . ok
I don't understand why women stay in relationships like that. Why date/marry someone who feigns incompetence to disrespect you? Men aren't children living in adult bodies. If they can't behave like an adult than it's probably a clear indication they shouldn't be in an adult relationship.
I could only read the first few of these before I had to stop because I'm so ashamed. 🫣
Where are the posts about women's weaponized incompetence? What's that? There aren't any!
Do you really think women NEVER pretend they don't know how to do something just so they won't have to do it?
Load More Replies...When I was in my early 20s, I was dating a girl who asked me to go grocery shopping with her. I did. Whenever I saw a product on the shelf that I knew the jingle for, I would sing it... at the top of my voice. 🎶 My Mommy loves me! How do I know? Because my Mommy tells me so! Mom brings Del Monte home! 🎶 She was SO embarrassed! I. Had. A. BLAST! It was SO fun! About a week later, she was going shopping. I said, "Do you want me to go with you? Can I come?" Her reply? "NO!! SIT! STAY!"
So...you're bragging about being one of these people?
Load More Replies...Plenty of women pick men who dont make lots of money or look good. Nice try, MRA troll, now f*ck off
Load More Replies...We don't care about user opinions, we are irritated by the constant stream of vitriolic, targeted attacks, especially when Bordepanda's whole purpose is ostensibly to provide "entertaining and amusing news." Boredpanda has no business loathing an entire sex and an entire country. If the users do so, that is completely understandable and impossible to prevent. If a significant portion of BP's published content, created by its administration, has this purpose, then dare I suggest a perversion of BP's purpose is occurring. If "AntiAmerican.com" does this, then that is understandable; that was its intended purpose. If "Funandgames.com" starts publishing article after article criticizing and laughing at an entire group and nationality, would that be appropriate, given the site's explicitly stated purpose?
Load More Replies...Admittedly, my mom does the weaponized incompetence thing, too. But in my 46 years on this earth most examples have been men. Women initiate 75% of divorces. There’s a reason for that statistic, and smart men take it to heart.
Load More Replies...Hello Anonymous, all men are not worthless. The fact that women accept the planned incompetence of the men in their lives is pathetic. I got divorced over twenty years ago and couldn't tell you who was more incompetent in my marriage. I do know reading stuff like this and other stuff about marriage shows me we all need to sit and start communicating with our significant others before we ever get married. If we learn to communicate before we get married, there just might be less divorces in the future.
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