T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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809.1 | Everything is give and take | ADNERB::MAHON | | Mon Jul 20 1992 13:53 | 26 |
| My husband and myself both work full-time.
Responsibilities with us are definitely 50-50.
This is what it's evolved to after our nine year relationship.
HE washes and dries the clothes, I fold them.
HE pays all the bills, but I am on a fixed spending amount.
HE mows the front lawn, I mow the back.
HE cleans the complete house on his night off from the gym, I keep it
in semi-clean state for the rest of the time.
I do ALL the cooking. I prepare his two lunches, his egg whites (peel
his eggs), snacks, beverages, cereal (pour it in bowl for him), etc.
Whatever needs to get done to get us out the door in the morning. I am
completely happy with this, because I like things a certain way in the
kitchen. Like I load the dishwasher a certain way, and hate it when he
puts stuff in unorganized like.
I have forced myself lately to do more work around the house, and
outside. Only because I find myself asking him for EVERYTHING. Gosh,
he's spoiled me!
What is most important is, we do for each other. We discuss any issues
we have with work, home, etc. We have become best friends besides
spouses. I honestly can say I wouldn't want my life any other way.
Brenda
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809.2 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Mon Jul 20 1992 14:01 | 15 |
|
Not directed to anyone in particular, just random thoughts.
What happens if I do 51% of the chores, and she does "only" 49%?.
Should I sue her?.
Why does it have to be so cut and dry (50/50 ratio)?.
Why can't people just do for others??.
I realize this might seem a little bit simplistic, but just think about it
before you (generic you) comment on this.
Art.
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809.3 | | ASDS::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Mon Jul 20 1992 14:13 | 16 |
|
I see your point about exactly 50/50 and you're right. Who cares
about 5-10 points difference? It's when one person is doing
everything but vacuuming that things get exhausting. I'm starting
to wonder if it isn't symbolic. If people have equal emotional
investment in a relationship and they love each other, then shouldn't
they both want to do their part? If on the other hand, one person
really doesn't have all that much emotion to invest, then they
just don't care as much and aren't willing to pitch in on a day-to-day
basis.
re: Brenda; I'm glad to hear things are working so well in your
relationship. That's the first good example I've ever heard of.
It's quite heartening.
Rachael
|
809.4 | There is no % | ADNERB::MAHON | | Mon Jul 20 1992 14:16 | 14 |
| RE .02
No one in the world should have to FEEL OBLIGATED to do anything for
anyone. You do what makes you happy. I have alot of people that say
"Why do you do that for him? Let him do it himself." Well, it all
boils down to IT MAKES ME HAPPY.
There is no law that states an exact percentage of what you should do
for the other person. If there were, I'm sure I wouldn't live by it!
If someone ever told me I should do something because I am the wife,
they know what they can do with it.
So, in ending...DO WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY.
|
809.5 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Jul 20 1992 14:22 | 8 |
| re .2, it doesn't really matter who does what. All that counts is that
both people are happy with the way it is.
re .0, I answered this in =wn='s and don't feel like repeating it here.
:-)
Lorna
|
809.6 | | WESELL::RAUH_C | | Mon Jul 20 1992 14:48 | 10 |
| .5 I will second that! Its what works for you and your SO. It is not
always the men the quit in a relationship. Women can quit too. Mine
did. Stopped working, stopped talking, stopped, helping us work
together on a dream.
It seems like this is to be a loaded, onesided Q&A
period where men are to become the rasputians because some of them do
not contribute to house hold clean and shine. Many of them make sure
you car works, is clean, etc. Do outside painting, mowing, snow
removal. I hope it aint so.
|
809.7 | | ASDS::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Mon Jul 20 1992 15:26 | 17 |
|
re .6
I absolutely don't want this to be a "men are jerks" kind of survey.
Truth be told, I think that in this day and age everybody is
confused about their "roles" and that some men as well as some
women, have trouble adjusting. Conversly, some people adjust very
well to change. I focused on men because my husband is telling me
that his lack of initiative to take on at least partial responsibility
for our relationship, is because he's male. I think that's a cop-out
and I just wanted to get some answers from other men about how they
feel about that.
I hope this has made you understand my intentions better.
Rachael
|
809.8 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 20 1992 15:46 | 12 |
| I am glad that this is not going to be 'men are jerks' discussion. I am
getting tired of that line of discussion. I am sorry that you and your
SO are not getting along. I agree that there is allot of incongruities
and mixed messages and feel that he too should be helping yha if You
are helping him. Case in point, when I went to night school the ex
<wife at the time> carried a bigger portion of the work load cause it
was for the good of the family unit. I told her that it was her turn
next. She declined the offer, such is life. I would have made it work
if she said yes. But as it stands now, I am a custodial dad, I press
little girl(s) dress's, make lunchs, clean house, make cookies, and
take my/our daughter to the beach. I don't think that there is anything
wrong with that or me.
|
809.9 | TIMES LIKE THESE! | MRKTNG::MAHONEY_D | | Mon Jul 20 1992 16:22 | 6 |
|
After reading the previous notes "Times like these - I'm glad I'm
single"
|
809.10 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Deep end of the pule | Mon Jul 20 1992 17:59 | 10 |
| But when you're a single, you end up doing 100% of everything.
Anyway, when I was a couple, it was fine.... Romance was probably
actually more like 100%/100%, but the income majority swayed back and
forth, and we naturally split most other duties: I don't mind
vacuuming but never notice how dirty the tub is getting; she hated
doing dishes but got relaxed by cooking (which makes me tense); I keep
track of events, she kept track of parties...
Ray
|
809.11 | | TRCOA::QUIROGA | | Tue Jul 21 1992 11:19 | 14 |
|
I guess the point I was trying to make in my .2, was that I do not
keep track of how many "points' I have or she has. We both do what is
best for our marriage to work. I am very lucky to have married the
woman I have as my wife. We do for each other, that works for us.
Of course this type of "arrangement" is not for everybody. We are so in
tune with one another, we don't have to discuss who does what when. It
is very hard to explain, all I know is that it works (for us).
I re-read my .2 again, and this reply seems to be very simplistic too, my
apologies for that, but that's how I feel.
Art.
|
809.12 | 50/50 is in the eye of the beholder | DEBUG::SCHULDT | As Incorrect as they come... | Tue Jul 21 1992 11:29 | 13 |
| Interesting question... I'd like to add that what seems to one person
to be a 50/50 split may not seem so to the other.
When I was married, I did all the yard work, all of the exterior
and interior maintenance and repairs, and some of the cleaning indoors.
My wife (ex now) thought that I should be doing half of the cleaning
indoors. She had a blind spot for outside work, somehow it just
"didn't count" in figuring out chores.
Unfortunately, in our case, we _both_ hated housework...
Larry
who_now_has_someone_in_to_clean
|
809.13 | Share a bath, wash each others' backs | SALEM::KUPTON | I got Skeeels too! | Tue Jul 21 1992 14:26 | 48 |
| I'll answer .0 from the male side of the question. We've been married
18 years......
My wife is manager with a major supermarket chain.
She does the balancing of the checkbook and the bills.
I do most of the cooking.
She does all wallpapering and stenciling
I do all the repair work on the house.
We share windows when we don't pay a contractor to do them.
When school is in session:
I do most of the laundry....I do 90% of the ironing.
I do most of the housework...she does the stuff that makes the house
look great.
I do most of the mowing...she does the raking. I have gotten my oldest
daughter into doing the lawn.
I do the snow removal with the snowblower, the kids do the light stuff.
I do cars...she absolutely refuses to have anything to do with them,
including putting gas in the tank......
I do the dump.
She makes all of the social arrangements.
She makes all of the telephone calls.
I do the dog grooming and walking.
We split shopping for groceries....
I've become the kids' confidential advisor, she's the disciplinarian.
This is the real role reversal. They come to me first, even our
daughters who are 17 and 13. My son still goes to her first, but is
beginning to change. My hours are more steady, hers more flexible.
We're happy, the kids are happy......that's the important thing.
You have to do what works for you. You have to be able to say "I hate
doing laundry because I don't do it well!!! You do the laundry and I'll
do the dishes....ok???"
Ken
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809.14 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Wed Jul 22 1992 11:09 | 22 |
|
romance/ relationship responsibilities -- equal
income -- wife earns subtantially more, works longer hours
cleaning -- I do 90%
paying bills -- I do all
children/ pet chores & joys -- I do most (3 kids, no pets)
organizing the social calender -- wife does most
It's all been worked out (informally) over 11 years of marriage. We're not
very organized people.
There is a danger, however, in the "just do what makes you happy" idea
expressed by a few here. If "doing what makes you happy" doesn't take
into account making your spouse happy when that spouse's view of things
differs from yours, you could be in for trouble. Classic example is
housework. If you say "I do help with housework, but this level of
messiness is acceptable to me" when it's not acceptable to spouse, you
put spouse in position of giving in to you or cleaning up him/herself.
Kit
|
809.15 | Why Change? | BSS::P_BADOVINAC | | Thu Jul 23 1992 16:37 | 34 |
|
Each of us has a set of priorities that comes from our perspective
of life. If someone (male or female; this is not a gender issue)
doesn't mind wearing wrinkled clothes, they will see no value
spending their time ironing. If two people are living together and
one person's perspective states that "Good Girls/Boys don't relax
until all the 'chores' are done, there will undoubtably be friction
if the other person doesn't adhere to the RULES.
Very few people in this country die of a disease caused by wrinkled
clothing, yet I've met those that see unironed clothing as a sure
sign that Satan has taken over some poor fool's soul.
Rachael, I don't know you but I'd be willing to bet that if your
husband had no clean clothing to wear and you told him that it was
his problem that he would eventually wash some clothes. The problem
is probably more about frequency. You would like him to (fill in)
much more often than he would do it without you pointing out to him.
His priorities are different than yours. He would much rather watch
the 'Dream Team' on TV than scrape dirty dishes. You will not
change him for any length of time. You can only set up parameters
that you can live with and accept the consequences.
I don't mean to chastise you, Rachael, really I don't. I hope I'm
not coming across that way. I'm just trying to inject some reality
here. I don't think it's a 'male' thing but if a woman is driving a
car and the guy is going crazy he will most likely simply take over
the responsibilities for driving. She will not drive him nuts
because he will often eliminate the situation by doing it himself.
If dirty (fill in) doesn't bother him and you do it with only minor
complaining then why change?
patrick
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809.16 | Easier said than done... | JUPITR::KAGNO | Mom to the Wrecking Crew | Fri Jul 24 1992 11:00 | 16 |
| I tried that with my husband, Peter. I stopped doing everything for
him for awhile. Stopped doing his laundry and folding it, stopped
cleaning his bathroom, and picking up his dirty clothes from the
bedroom floor. Oh, he eventually got to things himself, but not
without telling me what a selfish b*tch I am for cleaning the things
that only *I* care about, and neglecting his.
When someone is always used to someone else doing things for them, it
isn't that easy to stop "cold turkey". I suppose I never should have
started, but that's the type of person I am. I like things done when
they need to be done and on an ongoing basis, not waiting until the
place is trashed to clean it all up.
It is a big relief not to have to worry about his stuff now (we are
separated).
|
809.17 | | ASDS::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Mon Jul 27 1992 08:57 | 19 |
|
re .15:
I understand what you are saying and I think what has caused the
mess that I'm in is that I've followed the philosophy of " if I care
more about X than Jon does, then I should fix X more than Jon does".
After all, it's not fair to make him to work to meet my needs, is it?
Unfortunately, I've discovered that I care more about virtually
everything than he does. At some point in any partnership, there must
be compromise. In addition, it seems to me that part of marriage is
trying to meet, (or help your mate meet), their needs. Once you adopt
the philosophy of "me me me", there is no relationship - only one
with yourself.
And to my husband's credit, he's been Mr Helpful this past weekend.
He's even made jokes about forgetting how to clean cause he hadn't
done it for so long. Hopefully spirit of compromise will last.
Rachael
|
809.18 | Go figure | BSS::P_BADOVINAC | | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:48 | 39 |
| re: <<< Note 809.16 by JUPITR::KAGNO "Mom to the Wrecking Crew" >>>
-< Easier said than done... >-
I tried that with my husband, Peter. I stopped doing everything for
him for awhile. Stopped doing his laundry and folding it, stopped
cleaning his bathroom, and picking up his dirty clothes from the
bedroom floor. Oh, he eventually got to things himself, but not
without telling me what a selfish b*tch I am for cleaning the things
that only *I* care about, and neglecting his.
>> When I mentioned consequences this is what I was alluding to.<<
When someone is always used to someone else doing things for them, it
isn't that easy to stop "cold turkey". I suppose I never should have
started, but that's the type of person I am. I like things done when
they need to be done and on an ongoing basis, not waiting until the
place is trashed to clean it all up.
>>Wouldn't it be nice if you had to go to some sort of pre-marital
counselling where they said "OK you two want to get married. Who's
responsibility is it to do -----?"<<
It is a big relief not to have to worry about his stuff now (we are
separated).
>>Don't we both know that he will be washing his own clothes when
he's on his own? Please don't tell me that his mother is doing it
for him even if it's true. That just pisses me off sooooooo much.
Isn't it remarkable that he will do all those things now but
wouldn't do them when you were together? My brother is married to a
woman who is very unhealthy due to smoking, over eating, no exercise
etc. He begs her to change. She refuses. She asked me once to
tell my brother to back off. I told her that I thought it was
ironic that she wouldn't change for him, the man she loved, but if
they got divorced she would change to satisfy a man she didn't even
know (somebody new).<<
patrick
|
809.19 | 50/50? | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:06 | 13 |
| My wife generally cooks meals and does more housekeeping than I do.
I generally do the laundry, mow the lawn, shovel the snow, take out
the trash. She usually puts our son (5 yrs old) to bed on weekends
while I put him to bed during the week. 50 50? I don't know.
No one ever said marriage was a 50 50 proposition. I think if the
partners are looking at it like that they have the wrong attitude.
You have to be willing to just do what needs to be done to help
make relationships work.
In some areas (indoor) my wife takes the brunt of the load, outdoors
I clearly do. Also, house repairs fall on my shoulders.
Jeff
|
809.20 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:50 | 5 |
| Re .19 and "house repairs fall on my shoulders":
Gee, I have a house like that.
-b
|