T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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233.1 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Jul 19 1996 20:38 | 4 |
| At first, no. Before the open rounds of the divorce, she took child
rearing as some sort of men know nuthin, and women know it all to
commmunications with children.
|
233.2 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 11:11 | 15 |
|
We are a one income family so she does most of the "house" work.
However it is not simple as that. She seems to have plenty of time to
go "shopping" with her friend and next door neighbor at least twice a
week. I do most of the "maintenance" work. Mechanical work on the
vehicles, construction/maintenance on the house (remodel basement (read
dig one), re-roof house, paint house, build storage shed, paint garage,
build fence around yard for her dog, etc). When working from home I
usually fix my own breakfast and sandwich/whatever for lunch (I'm
probably just as good a cook as she is) so she cooks one meal a day.
So whenever she starts grumbling about doing "all the work" I offer to
swap jobs with her any time she'd like. Usually quiets things down
fairly quickly.
fred();
|
233.3 | just my humorous two cents. | BRAT::MINICHINO | | Mon Jul 22 1996 14:43 | 38 |
| I usually wouldn't get into this potential cat fight over the work load
in the house, but......I work close to 60 hours a week, as does he, I
manage to cook, clean , do laundry,go to the dump, stock the house with
essentials and such, take care of his son every other week. Up until a
recent confrontation he used the following as his weak excuses for his
lack of participation: I mow the lawn(bit over 1/2 acre), I maintain the
cars, I do the outside work, I shovel the driveway I maintain the
outside equipment, I paint and remodel what needs to be done.
OK>>>>so what part of all of those things does he do daily? HMMMMMMMMM
NONE! He mows the lawn once a week. He maintains the cars once a month
because he's a mechanic, his workers REALLY maintain the vehicles. He
does the outside work the same night he mows. He shoves the driveway
ONLY in the winter. We only own a lawmover, so the only equipement he
maintains are shovels and a mower he will dispose of at the first sign
of failure. He painted only once, the bathroom! and the rest of the
chores he does are to personal items HE alone uses....
So re-roofing the house I assume isn't done daily, building a storage
shed I guess would only be a one time event. Come on, how often are you
painting the couse or the garage. If it's more than once you need
better paint! How many dogs do you have to fence in.
Conversly, I shop daily to stock the house, you know the shampoo fairy
doesn't fly in and drop toiletries in the bathroom. I cook daily or we
eat frozen pizza. I do laundry every night, I clean the house daily. I
do go to the dump, meaning I collect the garbage daily. I only drive to
the dump once a week, and I only take care of his son every other
weekend... so the equality of the workloads seems to elude me a bit. I
have a good sense of humor about it, and I do rank on him about how
little he does to help maintain our world of serenity..but since I made
a real stink about it, the house either stays a mess now or he will
help pick up. I don't immediately make dinner for him, we share laundry
and the bathroom doesn't get stocked unless he helps.
And, as for shopping with my friends, I don't have much spare time to
do any "shopping with friends" but niether does he.
|
233.4 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 15:04 | 19 |
| reply .3
> So re-roofing the house I assume isn't done daily, building a storage
> shed I guess would only be a one time event. Come on, how often are you
> painting the house or the garage. If it's more than once you need
> better paint! How many dogs do you have to fence in.
Those are only some of the things. I've managed to keep busy for
about eight years. I've got a few years to go before the basement
is finished and she can deliver cold drinks to me in the built-in
hot tub ;^).
I get the distinct impression not only from you, but it seems to
be a central thread in the "division of labor" argument, that if he
isn't doing the traditional "house work" then he just must not be
working. Also a distinct lack of knowledge/appreciation of the
effort and labor it takes to do the "mens work".
fred();
|
233.5 | Suggestion for restoring balance | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 15:54 | 8 |
| A word of advice to women who get stuck doing all the cooking:
It's amazing what a few "Tofu, Sprouts, and Lima Bean Specials" will do
for restoring the balance! I actually like this kind of stuff, so it's
not hard to do---so whenever I'm doing more of the cooking than I want,
all I do is make a meal or two of the stuff I like! Works every time.
|
233.6 | Misleading stat. | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Mon Jul 22 1996 15:56 | 19 |
|
To answer your questions:
1. I welcome Women in the workplace because it eases the financial
burden on men.
2. When I was married we did share the division of labor to a very
small degree but for the most part I fixed cars chopped wood
fixed the plumbing and she tended the children and homeplace.
I would have preferred to share the labors so we could be
together some of the time but it didn't work out that way.
_ I don't personally know many men who come home and sit down with
a drink while mom does all the work.
I think the stat about women doing 2/3 of the work may reflect life
in some other countries but not the USA. -IMO-
bill
|
233.7 | Housework is a lot of work! | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:08 | 11 |
|
Addition to re:6
I forgot to add that after our seperation and I had to do housework
laundry shopping etc. I was amazed at how much work it turned out
to be. I have lots more respect for those who do housework.
Seems like men and women should swap jobs for awhile and maybe
we would understand each others point of view better.
IMO Bill
|
233.8 | | BRAT::MINICHINO | | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:18 | 15 |
| Hey,
Give me the lawnmower, I'll paint he garage, I'll fix the cars,(if I
knew how)..I'll shovel, I like to shovel I like doing the outside work.
But I can't do it all, because he hates the inside work as much as I do.
But two work faster than one. That was my arguement and it seems to be
working. I don't berate what men do, but I don't expect to be
"expected" to do the inside household labor. Not my bag, never has
been. I was my dad's tom girl and could do heavy lifting and manual
labor with out a complain, although I confess to using the "ooh I can't
lift it thing" when I got tired.
I'll be happy to do the "mens" job!!
|
233.9 | although no one has asked, i gotta put my 2 cents in | NAC::WALTER | | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:36 | 58 |
| I can see this note is going to be another note in the MENNOTES file
where we spar about who is better, man or women. It seems that most of
the notes in here you have a choice couple of men that go to town on
the women, probably because they went through a nasty divorce and then
you get the few women noters out there who try and make some sense of
all their anger.
I hope this note does not become the same.
As for myself and husband... its definately something that we could
argue about daily.
I remember less than a week ago I got home after working my eight hours
and did a load of laundry, emptied the dishwater, reloaded it with
the dishes from the night before, made our dinner, walked the dog,
read to our son two of his favorite books, folded and put away the
laundry, vacuumed the house and had our son fed and bathed by 7:30
(I was home at 4:45). I made a comment to my husband as I rounded the
kitchen to the living room, "I'm laying down and relaxing; I can't
believe how much I have got down since I got home today." Well he
immediately said "I have done alot too you know" and I almost asked
"what?" He had taken the dog out and helped clean the dishes after
dinner. But I didn't.
I didn't comment because I knew what I would get back for an answer.
He would remind me that he works in the city and has anywhere from an
hour to two hour commute depending on traffic (and I have a two minute
commute) and how he would rather be home with our son doing all these
things than travelling to the City to make ends meat. I knew that if I
challenged that statement I would be reminded of the door that he fixed
last month and the refrigerator that he fixes about every other month
and the basement that took a whole day to clean out. While I
contemplated challenging those things that I knew he was dying to get
out ...
I also remembered the seven hours he took to make a stone patio for us
the previous weekend and all the shoveling and spreading and digging
that went along with it. I remember all the pruning that he did to
make our yard look nice so we could live comfortably in it. I decided
that it wasn't worth the arguement.
While the things that my husband does are not things that we *need* to
live (as the things that I do) the things that he does are certainly
appreciated by me and my family. Sure, we didn't ask for the stone
patio put in but we certainly think its terrific once its in place.
Sure, my husband doesn't ask me to spend two hours cleaning our jacuzzi
tub but the smile on his face when he enters to fill it after a hard
days work and sees its sparkling is enough for me.
I have tried to keep the yard up by myself and it was too much work for
just me. Having my husband do the real grunting work outside enabled
me to be able to wander about and put various flowers and vegetables in
their gardens so we could all enjoy the fruits of labor.
There are days that he outdoes himself and there are days that I outdo
myself. Its called a compromise. Its called marraige.
cj
|
233.10 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:47 | 15 |
|
>I forgot to add that after our seperation and I had to do housework
> laundry shopping etc. I was amazed at how much work it turned out
> to be. I have lots more respect for those who do housework.
During the 3 odd years I was _single_, I did my own shopping, house
cleaning, cooking, dishes, laundry, etc. Still had time work a full time
job and go out dancing nearly every night. I never could see what the big
deal was unless you figure that a job you don't want to do always seems
10 time harder to get done. How many women actually hang laundry out on
a line these days?
fred();
|
233.11 | When it's ONLY YOU, it's easier to keep from creating extra work. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:57 | 13 |
| RE: .10 Fred
> During the 3 odd years I was _single_, I did my own shopping, house
> cleaning, cooking, dishes, laundry, etc. Still had time work a full time
> job and go out dancing nearly every night. I never could see what the big
> deal was...
You didn't have kids living with you full time (nor were you also doing
these things for a spouse.)
If women only had to do the physical labor for their own personal needs,
the job would be a lot smaller (granted!) :/
|
233.12 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:08 | 12 |
|
I think another thing to consider here is that the women who are
contributors to this file all work outside the home. So we are going
to get a bit of a skewed sample. Another thing that I think should
come into consideration is the fact that although many women do _have_
to work outside the home, it is much easier for a woman to _choose_
whether or not she wants to work outside the home. I have a greater
degree of sympathy for those who _have_ to work than I do for those
who choose to work, then complain that _he_ should do more as a result
of her choice.
fred();
|
233.13 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:10 | 10 |
| re .11
> If women only had to do the physical labor for their own personal needs,
> the job would be a lot smaller (granted!) :/
And a man could afford a lot more "toys" if the salary he made only
went to support himself. So I guess that one's a wash.
fred();
|
233.14 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:19 | 17 |
| RE: .13 Fred
>>> I never could see what the big deal was...
>> If women only had to do the physical labor for their own personal needs,
>> the job would be a lot smaller (granted!) :/
i.e., The 'BIG DEAL' was that you weren't doing the work for a FAMILY.
You were doing the work for YOURSELF. Work for a FAMILY is a much,
much, MUCH bigger deal.
> And a man could afford a lot more "toys" if the salary he made only
> went to support himself. So I guess that one's a wash.
So could a woman. Men get more money because they are perceived as
needing to 'support families' with it. If men didn't use this excuse,
then women could buy a lot more 'toys' with their money, too.
|
233.15 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:27 | 31 |
| RE: .12 Fred
> Another thing that I think should
> come into consideration is the fact that although many women do _have_
> to work outside the home, it is much easier for a woman to _choose_
> whether or not she wants to work outside the home.
Do you regard men as "WALKING WALLETS" or something?? Why on EARTH
would a woman have a 'choice' not to work simply because her husband
works? (Is that how it is in your family??)
Women work because we have careers (just like men have careers.)
Would you stop working if your wife got a job? Career women don't
stop working simply because someone else is working. (Not hardly!)
The point isn't just to make a buck or two, ya know.
> I have a greater
> degree of sympathy for those who _have_ to work than I do for those
> who choose to work, then complain that _he_ should do more as a result
> of her choice.
If a guy deliberately marries a doctor or a software engineer, it's
pretty much a given that his spouse will work outside the home. I have
no sympathy for a man who marries a working woman and then complains
when he's asked to help around the house.
I have even less sympathy for a man who complains bitterly about how
men have to work while ALSO considering it his wife's inconvenient
"CHOICE" if she works outside the home and expects him to help around
the house.
|
233.16 | | BRAT::MINICHINO | | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:50 | 4 |
| RE: -2(?)
I'll be taking the clothes off the line tonight, as a matter of fact.
|
233.17 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 17:56 | 43 |
|
> Do you regard men as "WALKING WALLETS" or something?? Why on EARTH
> would a woman have a 'choice' not to work simply because her husband
> works? (Is that how it is in your family??)
As you asked me a while back, What planet have you been on?
What do you think the family life expectancy of a man would be who
decides, without the joint decision of his wife, to stay home and raise
kids. Heck, women don't even have to have a husband to decide to stay
home and let someone else support them.
Somebody's sure as heck watching those day-time TV shows.
> Women work because we have careers (just like men have careers.)
> Would you stop working if your wife got a job? Career women don't
> stop working simply because someone else is working. (Not hardly!)
Not all women are "career women". Just like not all dads are "deadbeat
dads". So again you are trying to define the rules to fit your
argument.
> > I have a greater
> > degree of sympathy for those who _have_ to work than I do for those
> > who choose to work, then complain that _he_ should do more as a result
> > of her choice.
>
> If a guy deliberately marries a doctor or a software engineer, it's
> pretty much a given that his spouse will work outside the home. I have
> no sympathy for a man who marries a working woman and then complains
> when he's asked to help around the house.
An anecdote that I think is pretty indicative of our society. My
wife's sister's husband got laid off a couple years back. He caught
hell from even his own family about why he didn't "get a job" even
thought his lack of employment was certainly not his fault. His wife
was one of those "feminist" types who filed law suits to work in
a mine, Master Blaster license and all that. A couple years ago
she decided she'd rather stay home and raise kids. Narry a word from
the family or anyone else.
fred();
|
233.18 | Maybe things are just exceptionally old-fashioned at your house. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:09 | 54 |
| RE: .17 Fred
> As you asked me a while back, What planet have you been on?
Obviously, you don't live on this one (Earth.)
NO WAY is it the 'default' that women stay at home unless they 'have'
to go to work (or 'choose' to go to work even though their husbands
already do work outside the home.)
> What do you think the family life expectancy of a man would be who
> decides, without the joint decision of his wife, to stay home and raise
> kids.
Perhaps YOUR wives decided to 'stay home' without talking to you about
it, but it's a joint decision in most families. (What a concept, eh?)
> Heck, women don't even have to have a husband to decide to stay
> home and let someone else support them.
It's usually a recipe for abject poverty, though.
> Somebody's sure as heck watching those day-time TV shows.
A lot of people work SWING SHIFT and THIRD SHIFT, Fred. (Men and women.)
> Not all women are "career women".
NO WAY is it the 'default' that women don't work unless they 'have' to
work or unless they make some big 'choice' to work.
The default is that women WORK these days. It's unusual when women
don't work.
> An anecdote that I think is pretty indicative of our society. My
> wife's sister's husband got laid off a couple years back. He caught
> hell from even his own family about why he didn't "get a job" even
> thought his lack of employment was certainly not his fault.
Women on Welfare catch a lot worse hell even though they don't usually
have job experience or contacts which can help them get jobs.
> His wife was one of those "feminist" types who filed law suits to work
> in a mine, Master Blaster license and all that. A couple years ago
> she decided she'd rather stay home and raise kids. Narry a word from
> the family or anyone else.
In our society, women are often trashed if they DON'T want to stay at
home to raise kids. (Some people here trash women for this very
reason, in fact.)
You can't have it both ways. If you want to trash women for not wanting
to stay home and raise kids while the husband works, DON'T ALSO trash
women for WANTING to stay home and raise kids while the husband works.
|
233.19 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:10 | 7 |
| Re suzanne.
You are still trying to define the rules to fit your argument. Under
those circumstance I find it extremely difficult to hold any kind of
rational debate.
fred();
|
233.20 | Your ideas make Fred Flintstone look progressive. :> | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:12 | 8 |
| Fred, "trying to define the rules to fit your argument" is nothing
more than your newest 'CLICHE' to launch when you'd really rather
cry 'Uncle'!
If you can't discuss this, fine.
It doesn't matter anyway.
|
233.21 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:18 | 16 |
|
I like to play football, but I'd also rahter not play in a game
where the other team gets to decide what the rules are after
each play.
> <<< Note 233.20 by SPECXN::CONLON >>>
> -< You're about as progressive as Fred Flintstone. :) >-
>
> Fred, "trying to define the rules to fit your argument" is nothing
> more than your newest 'CLICHE' to launch when you'd really rather
> cry 'Uncle'!
And resorting to personal attacks seems to be something you seem to
do when you run out of logic and evidence to support your argument.
fred();
|
233.22 | There is ZERO logic in your newest cliche... | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:26 | 23 |
| RE: .21 Fred
> I like to play football, but I'd also rahter not play in a game
> where the other team gets to decide what the rules are after
> each play.
One person writes a note, then another person writes a note (unless
the topic gets closed.) These simple rules have been in place for
almost 10 years. No one is changing them (least of all, me.)
The thing about 'changing the rules' is just some nonsensical thing
that you've started saying.
>> Fred, "trying to define the rules to fit your argument" is nothing
>> more than your newest 'CLICHE' to launch when you'd really rather
>> cry 'Uncle'!
> And resorting to personal attacks seems to be something you seem to
> do when you run out of logic and evidence to support your argument.
You don't think that YOU engage in personal attacks when you launch
accusations at me? (Hopefully, you don't see it as your PLACE to
do so.)
|
233.23 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 22 1996 18:43 | 20 |
|
rep .18
Suzanne, how can you expect to carry on any kind of rational debate
when you make statements like:
> NO WAY is it the 'default' that women stay at home unless they 'have'
> to go to work (or 'choose' to go to work even though their husbands
> already do work outside the home.)
Bedause the 'default' _is_ "whatever she decides goes". That includes
working, not woring, haveing an affair, running up huge debts, or just
about anything that does not demonsterably put the kids in mortal
danger. Especially if there are children the man has two choices 1)
Put up with it and support the wife and family, 2) get a divorce and
support the wife, the family, _and_ her boyfriend. Because the
"default" is _the_ _court_ _will_ _give_ _her_ _custody_ _of_ _the_
_kids_.
fred();
|
233.24 | You're not a hapless foil, Fred. You're just old-fashioned. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 19:00 | 58 |
| RE: .23 Fred
> Suzanne, how can you expect to carry on any kind of rational debate
> when you make statements like:
>> NO WAY is it the 'default' that women stay at home unless they 'have'
>> to go to work (or 'choose' to go to work even though their husbands
>> already do work outside the home.)
> Bedause the 'default' _is_ "whatever she decides goes".
IN YOUR HOUSE, maybe. This isn't how it works in every family in
America. These days, women are expected to work unless there is
a good reason (such as raising small kids) for women to stay home.
(In the case of 'small kids', women are pressured to want to stay
at home - otherwise, women are expected to work.)
> That includes working, not woring, haveing an affair, running up huge
> debts, or just about anything that does not demonsterably put the kids
> in mortal danger.
Again, AT YOUR HOUSE!!!
Most families talk about their financial situations.
> Especially if there are children the man has two choices 1)
> Put up with it and support the wife and family, 2) get a divorce and
> support the wife, the family, _and_ her boyfriend. Because the
> "default" is _the_ _court_ _will_ _give_ _her_ _custody_ _of_ _the_
> _kids_.
Fred - never in a MILLION YEARS could you consider a woman to be your
partner. So, instead, she can do whatever she wants (and you're just
the hapless foil who can't do anything about anything.)
Never in a million years would I consider it my 'right' to stop working
just because I'd rather do something else (like FINISH GRADUATE SCHOOL,
even though it would probably help our finances a great deal if I were
to finish my Masters in Computer Science faster by doing it full-time.)
It's something families discuss!!! My income is roughly half the money
that keeps us afloat. I don't have the real 'choice' to stop being a
bread-winner any more than you do.
If you're in a situation where your wife doesn't work even though you
guys do NOT have small children at home - this is your choice. If you
and your wife got together (AS EQUALS) to make a different decision,
you two might agree that it would be nice to afford a better retirement
for the TWO of you by having both of you work now.
Or perhaps you two just don't talk at all about family decisions.
Unless your situation at home has changed, I thought that your only
children were the 'grown' and 'almost-grown' children from your first
marriage.
What 'children' would the courts give to your current wife if you
decided to make changes in your life?
|
233.25 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 22 1996 23:57 | 16 |
| Look, Fred - your marriage works well for you. I'm happy for you.
Most women these days are expected to work, though, whether you
realized it or not.
Maybe I just inherited my Mother's Protestant Work Ethic or something
(or the work ethic from my Roman Catholic upbringing on my Dad's side),
but I can't imagine a situation where it would be ok for me to stop
striving to be one of the two bread-winners in the house (unless I won
the lottery or unless I could replace my income with some other earning
strategy.)
It may SEEM as though women aren't expected to strive in our society,
but we are expected to do so (and the vast majority of us DO strive.)
Sorry if I hit some sort of hot button in your actual life.
|
233.26 | | MROA::YANNEKIS | Hi, I'm a 10 year NOTES addict | Tue Jul 23 1996 09:34 | 33 |
|
hmm ...
I think what happens in Emmy's and my relationsip is not that unusual.
We both have full time job and we made a series of decisions (job for
Emmy, job for Greg, where to buy a house) that left it where Emmy does
more of the home related stuff. She does 80% of the slepping to day
care, virtually all of the shopping, and virtualy all the cleaning.
She also has the kids a couple hours a day when I'm not home. A couple
times a year this flairs up as she complains she does most of this
stuff and I don't help enough ... and she is correct.
When I'm a good spouse a agree with her and try to do more. When I'm
feeling combative the conversation takes this turn.
Both our lives involve kids, home care, commuting, and working. Emmy
you certainly do most of the kid and home care stuff. However if you
include communting and work time I don't think you're being fair. We
both get up at 6:00 am and go straight out until 8:00 pm. Then 3-4 days
a week I put in another 1-2 hours of work or laundry or painting or
etc. If you look at overall time I do more than you so if anyone
should be getting more help it's me. Now this incredibly articulate
rational argument is not usually well recieved but that may have
something to do with the even calm delivery I give ... 8^(.
Bottom line Emmy does more of the (IMO) tougher more stressful stuff
while I do lots that's invinsible to her. The issue is not really who's
doing what but the choices we have made that make us this busy in
total; choices we control.
Greg
|
233.27 | | MROA::YANNEKIS | Hi, I'm a 10 year NOTES addict | Tue Jul 23 1996 09:43 | 26 |
|
a second reply on statistics in general.
I don't know if I believe the 30% more work for women number but I
absolutely believe across the whole population that women do more than
men. Besides any imbalances in current two income families there are at
least two factors involved.
One there are many more stay-at-home moms than stay-at-home dads and
I would expect any stay-at-home parent to do a lot more around the house
than the parent heading to a job. I would expect any average across
all families to show women doing more home stuff.
Second the stats usually included all families and this includes a huge
pipeline of older traditional families that this imbalance was probably
the norm. An imbalance that I would expect is getting much better as
you look at younger and younger couples. This issue is prominant in a
lot stats like these. If you use 1970 as a marker of the beginning of
more equality/similarity of women and men's roles then I would only
expect a big change in folks 45 or younger and that leaves a 20 year
pipeline of folks doing it the old way. We can't change the past but we
can look at the present and see if it's gotten better.
GReg
|
233.28 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:01 | 12 |
| re .25
It is _not_ just my personal life. Take a good look at the court
system these days.
> Most women these days are expected to work, though, whether you
> realized it or not.
Not to many notes ago you were complaining about the pressure being
put on women to stay home. Which is is going to be?
fred();
|
233.29 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:13 | 15 |
|
re .24
> Fred - never in a MILLION YEARS could you consider a woman to be your
> partner. So, instead, she can do whatever she wants (and you're just
> the hapless foil who can't do anything about anything.)
Suzanne, if anybody is trying to judge the world by their personal
experience it is _you_. I have never said anything about any of
this being the problem in my _current_ marriage or my _current_
personal life at all. That of which I speak of the court system
is from not only my personal experience, but of _hundreds_ of men
that I have helped and dealt with over the years.
fred();
|
233.30 | Welfare Moms are trashed to the end of the Galaxy for not working. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 12:39 | 15 |
| RE: .28 Fred
>> Most women these days are expected to work, though, whether you
>> realized it or not.
> Not to many notes ago you were complaining about the pressure being
> put on women to stay home. Which is is going to be?
It's BOTH (and that's the hell of it, as I've stated here many times.)
Women with small children (and a husband!!) are pressured to want to
stay home to raise children. Other women are expected to work.
(The small children who would be ruined by daycare if the woman had
a husband are suddenly going to be ruined if they do NOT go to daycare
when the Mom has no husband.) We've gone over all this before.
|
233.31 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:09 | 5 |
|
So...Some women may have to do something they would rather not do?
WELCOME TO LIFE!
fred();
|
233.32 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:22 | 14 |
| RE: .31 Fred
> So...Some women may have to do something they would rather not do?
> WELCOME TO LIFE!
No, women are pressured to go in DIFFERENT DIRECTIONS (180 degrees
apart).
They're told that their children will be ruined if they send them
to daycare in one situation, but they're also told that their children
will be ruined if they do NOT go to daycare in another situation.
Some in our society just seem to like to slap women around this way.
(I suspect that it's some sort of power trip.)
|
233.33 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:48 | 11 |
|
Suzanne,
What you are asking is for a world in which women don't have to
do anything other than what they darn well please. We _all_ have
pressure to do things that we don't necessarily want to do. There
are 47 gazillion laws on the books for people to do things they
don't necessarily want to do. Again you provide us with a much
better example than an argument.
fred();
|
233.34 | Then gender double standard, again. | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:49 | 16 |
| Actually, according to the courts, it's perfectly ok for a
working woman to decide to simply retire and stay home with her
child(ren). In fact, it's so OK, that the woman can then sue
for (more) child support and no one will dare question it.
I know this for a fact. I just went through it.
But reverse the circumstances, and a man who decides to
voluntarily stop working is labelled a deadbeat and sent to
jail.
I have no doubt that there are conflicting pressures upon women
to either work or stay at home with kids, but frankly,
Scarlet....
tim
|
233.35 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:52 | 4 |
| And men who ask for more child support money are considered crude and
greedy slimes. For the old bias stats that women make less than men.
|
233.36 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:03 | 9 |
| .32 Re day care thelogical question: With all the people in todays work
force I find this a darn lame excuse. There are moms and dads whose
children are in day care and are doing very well socially when the go
into school or into the work force. Seldom do you hear about some kid
whose live is driven to crime and drugs because they went to day care.
Its more of the stay at home welfare folks that seem to have a problem.
And I am not trying to bash these women either. Just find that is most
lame.
|
233.37 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:10 | 17 |
| RE: .33 Fred
> What you are asking is for a world in which women don't have to
> do anything other than what they darn well please.
Rubbish!!!
I want a world where women aren't unfairly pressured to go in
OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS.
How about a world where families are left to judge for themselves
whether it's better for them to raise their children with two incomes
instead of one.
How about a world where women have equal opportunities in the workplace
so that they aren't treated as people who probably OUGHT to be at home
anyway.
|
233.38 | whine, whine, whine.... | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:20 | 16 |
| > I want a world where women aren't unfairly pressured to go in
> OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS.
I don't understand why you believe that this is a problem unique to
women. It isn't. Such is the paradox of a life of choices. If you
want to have choices, well, then you have to be prepared to actually
think about what to choose.
The right to choose incurs the responsibility for making tough
choices. If you'd rather not have to deal with the pressures of
conflicting objectives, then would you prefer to go back to having
it all taken care of for you? It is, after all, your choice. It
sounds like you'd like to have all your choices be easy ones. That
won't happen, at least not after about the age of 9.
tim
|
233.39 | | SCAMP::MINICHINO | | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:34 | 31 |
| I have to comment.
Some women make their own choices to go in the opposite directions.
Some don't have a choice. Some men don't like their jobs and seek new
ones. Some stay at the old one and moan about what a bum wrap they got.
So the boat does float in both directions. Hey, I'd go to work and do
all the traditional guys stuff, if the economy allowed that. I think
he'd be fine at home. However, the 1990's isn't offering the option to
too many people to have a child and one parent stay at home. But there
is no one making anyone go in a different direction. If you work for a
company that will send you back to school, change your career. If you
think there is NO WAY you can manage having a family, taking care of
the house and the kids...then you need to re-org your priorities. If you
are educated, work as well as your counter part males, you should be
fighting for that job...and I say fighting, cause I want to know I EARNed
that job as well as deserved that job. The 90's is different than it
was when our parents were growing up. My brother barely afforded to
have his wife stay at home and raise the three kids(one kid,then twins)
But they gave up a lot of things. Lot of things. Sanity was one of
them. But now my sil is working and they are paying their bills getting
some sanity back.
No one told my sil to stay home. She opted to do so, with that they
opted to give up some of the finer things they were used to. However,
my brother NEVER had that option. They made roughly the same amount of
money. So why did he keep working, cause he was told by my dad that was
the way. There is a two way street on this matter.
|
233.40 | Stop whining and see what I'm really saying here. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 14:58 | 34 |
| RE: .38 Tim
>> I want a world where women aren't unfairly pressured to go in
>> OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS.
> I don't understand why you believe that this is a problem unique to
> women. It isn't. Such is the paradox of a life of choices. If you
> want to have choices, well, then you have to be prepared to actually
> think about what to choose.
If it's REALLY a simple matter of making a choice, then our society
should treat it as such (instead of telling women that they'll 'RUIN'
their children unless they make *THE ONE CHOICE* that society wants
women to make in a given situation.)
If it's really a simple matter of making a choice, then let families
make the choice (without all the rest of the crap about how horrible
they'll be if they don't make the "POLITICALLY CONSERVATIVE CORRECT"
choice.)
> The right to choose incurs the responsibility for making tough
> choices.
If society beats the crap out of people for making a 'different'
choice, then more is involved than simply 'making a tough choice'.
> If you'd rather not have to deal with the pressures of
> conflicting objectives, then would you prefer to go back to having
> it all taken care of for you? It is, after all, your choice. It
> sounds like you'd like to have all your choices be easy ones. That
> won't happen, at least not after about the age of 9.
Not at all. I'd like some in our society to stop slapping women
around while women and families *contemplate* their choices in life.
|
233.41 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:22 | 16 |
| re .40
First of all I take offense to your constant reference that society
"beats the crap out of" and "slapping women around". Such gross
exagerations would be termed "hate speach" coming from nearly any other
group. Those statements are not only outrageous, but are a detriment
to women who have real problems.
Second, society is going to put pressure for people to behave in ways
that will benefit society (make laws for instance). I'm sure you can
name a few pressures that you would like society to put on a few
people. The "I want my cake and eat it too" attitude you appear to be
projecting is more a determinate to gaining sympathy for your desires
than a support.
fred();
|
233.42 | | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:23 | 26 |
| Re: .40
I never said it was a simple matter.
I agree that people deserve the privacy to have their decisions
respected without being second guessed or judged. I think people
who judge others for the decisions they make about the direction
their family should take are just meddling in other's private
business. However, I don't believe it is a problem that is unique
to women, because I know men have also faced the same dilemma for
centuries. I do believe that it is a matter of maturity to face the
facts of life and make the hard decisions that are necessary without
inflicting others with a litany of whining about how unfair life is.
Nobody said life is fair, and we have no right to expect it.
Personally, I've had to make a lot of very difficult decisions
lately, and my attitude has been to try to keep a sense of humor
about it - perhaps in the process, that has led to blowing off some
steam or jokingly complaining about how silly life can become, but
it has never been my style to publicly feel sorry for myself. Tough
decisions happen to us all - sometimes in droves. Eventually, it's
just comical, but fair has nothing to do with it.
It could be worse. You could have no choices at all.
tim
|
233.43 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:36 | 28 |
| RE: .41 Fred
> Those statements are not only outrageous, but are a detriment
> to women who have real problems.
These 'real problems' (which I also experienced in my first marriage)
are a direct RESULT of the attitude of people trying to exert power
over women. (So the statements are appropriate to describe this dynamic.)
> Second, society is going to put pressure for people to behave in ways
> that will benefit society (make laws for instance). I'm sure you can
> name a few pressures that you would like society to put on a few
> people.
When society pressures women to go in OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS, it doesn't
benefit anyone. It only makes things worse.
> The "I want my cake and eat it too" attitude you appear to be
> projecting is more a determinate to gaining sympathy for your desires
> than a support.
How does a request for CONSISTENCY amount to wanting to have cake and
eat it, too?
I *supported* my son on my own as a single Mom. I did what society
demanded that I do in my specific situation. You want to trash me
anyway (so obviously, our society is really looking to push women
around no matter what we do.)
|
233.44 | Just 'blowing off steam' about how 'silly' life can be... | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:49 | 22 |
| RE: .42 Tim
> I do believe that it is a matter of maturity to face the
> facts of life and make the hard decisions that are necessary without
> inflicting others with a litany of whining about how unfair life is.
> Nobody said life is fair, and we have no right to expect it.
So when do you plan to stop whining? Or don't you call it that
when you talk about yourself?
> Personally, I've had to make a lot of very difficult decisions
> lately, and my attitude has been to try to keep a sense of humor
> about it - perhaps in the process, that has led to blowing off some
> steam or jokingly complaining about how silly life can become, but
> it has never been my style to publicly feel sorry for myself.
Well, just be sure to call it 'blowing off steam' when women talk
about 'how silly life can become' at times.
I've been very lucky in my life to make a life for my son in difficult
circumstances. I still speak out about the things I see around me,
though, because I'm a thinking, feeling human being (like you.)
|
233.46 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:57 | 9 |
|
re .44
> So when do you plan to stop whining? Or don't you call it that
> when you talk about yourself?
As if you have all that room to talk, Suzanne.
fred();
|
233.47 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:04 | 22 |
| re .43
> These 'real problems' (which I also experienced in my first marriage)
> are a direct RESULT of the attitude of people trying to exert power
> over women. (So the statements are appropriate to describe this dynamic.)
Not at all. They are gross exaggeration you are using to try to gain
sympathy for you victim-hood.
> When society pressures women to go in OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS, it doesn't
> benefit anyone. It only makes things worse.
Are you really so weak in your opinion of your own decisions that you
must have the ok of society to know you made the right choice.
> anyway (so obviously, our society is really looking to push women
> around no matter what we do.)
I think it more likely that there are a lot of people out there who
want to claim victim-hood no matter what society does.
fred();
|
233.48 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:04 | 9 |
| RE: .46 Fred
>> So when do you plan to stop whining? Or don't you call it that
>> when you talk about yourself?
> As if you have all that room to talk, Suzanne.
As if *YOU* have any room to talk at all, Fred.
|
233.49 | You're the consumate 'victim', Fred. | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:11 | 26 |
| RE: .47 Fred
>> These 'real problems' (which I also experienced in my first marriage)
>> are a direct RESULT of the attitude of people trying to exert power
>> over women. (So the statements are appropriate to describe this dynamic.)
> Not at all. They are gross exaggeration you are using to try to gain
> sympathy for you victim-hood.
This statement reveals quite a bit about you. It explains a lot about
the things you write in your quest to promote MEN as the true victims
in our society.
>> When society pressures women to go in OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS, it doesn't
>> benefit anyone. It only makes things worse.
> Are you really so weak in your opinion of your own decisions that you
> must have the ok of society to know you made the right choice.
Not at all. When women know they'll be damned if they do and damned
if they don't, it doesn't benefit anyone.
> I think it more likely that there are a lot of people out there who
> want to claim victim-hood no matter what society does.
Your name goes at the top of that list, Fred.
|
233.50 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:12 | 13 |
|
re .48
>As if *YOU* have any room to talk at all, Fred.
Is this the place where someone says "nheanheanheanheanhea"?
I've paid my dues, Suzanne. And I certainly do not depend on your
opinion, or much of anybody elses at this point, for approval.
And I _still_ think you make a better example than anything else.
fred();
|
233.51 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:19 | 29 |
| RE: .50 Fred
> Is this the place where someone says "nheanheanheanheanhea"?
No, it's "bwahahahahahahahahahaha" (and I say it to you.) :)
> I've paid my dues, Suzanne.
I've paid my dues, too. And then some!!
> And I certainly do not depend on your opinion, or much of anybody elses
> at this point, for approval.
No, you just like to push other people around at every opportunity.
> And I _still_ think you make a better example than anything else.
I supported myself and my son without asking anyone for anything
(and I'm working on my THIRD college degree since he was born.)
If you don't WANT women to take a stand to make lives for their
children without depending on unwilling taxpayers, just say so.
By the way, I see that you gave up on your 'new' cliche about 'changing
the rules to fit the argument'. You've now returned to one of your old
'standby' cliches.
I'll expect to see the other one anytime now. ("Hey, Suzanne, I'm
not going to play the game where I have to prove I'm right to YOUR
satisfaction.") An oldie but a goodie, eh Fred?
|
233.52 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:22 | 18 |
|
Yes, these "society says" and "society does" arguments tend to be
totally political and generally much ado about nothing. Saying
that women (or men) are pressured from both sides is just another
way of stating that there is a political faction standing behind
either side of the argument. So what else is new? The individual
still has the right to decide to live and work however he/she
sees fit. In spite of much political rhetoric on either side,
Suzanne's stated goal of "letting the family decide" is indeed the
norm in America.
In the 1990s, no, I do not believe that women are the oppressed
class. In the 1990s, no, I do not believe that fathers are the
oppressed class. If you've stood up for yourself and you were
successful, whither the supposed barriers?
Glenn
|
233.53 | New Notes Conference Needed | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:26 | 4 |
| I would like to suggest a new notes conference: MALE_CONTROL_FREAKS
Then, you wouldn't even have to waste your time dealing with uppity
b!tches who actually think we have the right to be equals!
|
233.54 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:30 | 13 |
|
> No, you just like to push other people around at every opportunity.
I think this goes beyond the bounds of personal attack, even for
the standards that the mods apply to you, Suzanne.
> I'll expect to see the other one anytime now. ("Hey, Suzanne, I'm
> not going to play the game where I have to prove I'm right to YOUR
> satisfaction.") An oldie but a goodie, eh Fred?
Oldie, Goodie, and still true.
fred();
|
233.55 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:42 | 8 |
| Fred, so you're a victim of the Mennotes moderators now, too?
(Geeesh.)
> Oldie, Goodie, and still true.
Sometimes it really seems that you LIVE for the cliches you throw at
me. :)
|
233.56 | | NQOS01::nqodhcp-137-208-30.nqo.dec.com::Workbench | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:46 | 5 |
|
Ya know ... if I didn't know better I would swear that Fred & Suzi
were a 'couple' ! (It's only a joke).
Chuck
|
233.57 | World War III | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:47 | 5 |
|
Chuckie, the state of marriage in this country hasn't gotten to
be *THAT BAD* yet. :)
|
233.58 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:48 | 13 |
|
>Fred, so you're a victim of the Mennotes moderators now, too?
>(Geeesh.)
I've got email some place to prove that one.
>Sometimes it really seems that you LIVE for the cliches you throw at
>me. :)
Hey, you threw that one first. Anyways, throwing things is the
girls way of fighting ;^).
fred();
|
233.59 | | GMASEC::KELLY | Queen of the Jungle | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:48 | 5 |
| aw, c'mon Suzanne, you know you and Fred secretly admire each other
:-)))
reminds me of the little boys who pull little girls pigtails in school
to get their attention, but with you and Fred, I can't tell who does
more pulling :-)))
|
233.60 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:50 | 3 |
|
Yeah, we're a regular 'Bosnia' all by ourselves. :)
|
233.61 | such angry people | NAC::WALTER | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:50 | 5 |
|
Well its nice to see this note has done what I thought it would.
cj
|
233.62 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:52 | 8 |
|
re .59
Now your really _are_ trying to get me in trouble. I have to work
with her husband, but he knows I'd never be able to take Suzanne
away from such a hansom hunk.
fred( 8^) );
|
233.63 | He's the absolute best!!!!!! | SPECXN::CONLON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:56 | 5 |
|
You're *extremely lucky* to get to work with my husband, Fred.
And you know it. :)
|
233.64 | | GMASEC::KELLY | Queen of the Jungle | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:58 | 25 |
| re: hansom hunk
Fred-
I didn't know Eric (I hope I got the name right!) was a hansom cab
driver! What job code is that?
Serious question for you guys now-getting back to the base note topic:
I have to agree that when I was married, I did most of the housework.
He cooked during the week, I cooked on weekends. When I cooked, I
cleaned the dishes. When he cooked, I also cleaned the dishes. I'm
not sure he knew where the washer and dryer were in our house. He
wouldn't get a dump sticker,so I had to and wouldn't you know, he
hated driving my car. Our house was in move-in condition, so no
repairs were effected by him during the time we shared the space.
I told him I needed more help. We both worked full time, thank
heavens, no kids. I was told how much more work he had now that we
had a house. He had to mow the lawn. He managed to do this once a
month, no kidding-see personal name! Oh, and he had to shovel in
the winter. We hired a plow guy and never owned a shovel. Ok, so
I didn't shop or do laundry or dust and vacuum every single day, but
I'm the only one who did it. It's not that I didn't value what he did,
but I'm not convinced that the work he did was either invisible or
equitable, but that was just my situation. I've learned from that :-).
|
233.65 | Sometimes you have to go on strike | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 17:35 | 20 |
| re .64, etc.
Just a quick comment (I didn't want to get involved in this one)
Sometimes the only way to bring about a change is to just STOP doing
some of the stuff that gets taken for granted, as uncomfortable as
that may make things in the short-term. For example, if you just
stopped doing his laundry, I'll bet he'd figure out how to use the
washer and dryer eventually. Many of the women of our generation
received a lot of 'programming', much of it on a subconscious level,
to be caretakers and put our own needs last. If we keep doing much
more than our own share, it's really our own fault. I know from
personal experience that you can beg, cajole, wheedle, yell, threaten,
and plead, but if you keep doing whatever it is, you will continue to
get stuck with it. You sometimes have to just stop--and let things
reach crisis proportions, temporarily, to force a change. It's too bad
that marriage sometimes has to be so confrontational, but if you keep
being in denial about various resentments, they will erode your
marriage until you'll have a divorce on your hands.
|
233.66 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Jul 23 1996 17:47 | 5 |
|
On the other side of the coin, my first marriage taught me to never
do as a favor something that you don't want to make your job.
fred();
|
233.67 | | GMASEC::KELLY | Queen of the Jungle | Tue Jul 23 1996 17:54 | 11 |
| re: .65
well, the marriage didn't last, but the division of labour was the
least of our problems at that point.
I have to admit, there are some jobs I simply would not have turned
over to him because I'm so anal about somethings, I'd drive him nuts
correcting the way he was doing lots of things. I also agree, I can't
be superwoman, so if the furniture gets a bit dusty, too bad. I can't
let the kitchen or bathroom go, I'm still a bit too anal for that, but
laundry, vacumming and dusting now get sacrificed when necessary :-)))
|
233.68 | Had to accept less than perfection | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Tue Jul 23 1996 18:25 | 21 |
| re .67
I went through that. My skin would crawl when I'd see him VACUUMING
FIRST, then walk all over it to dust and put junk away! An absolute
travesty! Or cleaning the toilet with Windex. Or one time he washed the
floor with dish detergent. It was kind of cute, actually. I used to
think he was pretending ignorance to get out of it, but then I
realized, hey! He just needed a lot more practice! To be fair, I'd mow
the lawn. I would just about examine it with a magnifying glass, and
it would look perfect (I was really trying hard!) But, he'd take a look
and say, "Hmmm...nice straight lines, but...What's THAT?" whereupon he
would go waaay over to the far end of the lawn to pull up a tiny stray
blade of grass that I'd missed. Guess I needed more practice too!
I guess we finally learned to accept a little less than perfection from
each other's efforts, as long as things were getting done and we were
getting along. I think, if the relationship is basically good, these
things get worked out to an agreeable compromise, but if there are lots
of other problems, it becomes a major battleground.
|
233.69 | | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's complicated. | Tue Jul 23 1996 21:11 | 26 |
|
I haven't had the time to read all the replies to this string, but..
As far as division of labor goes, there are areas which I protected
and that my ex protected. For example, she was always the better cook.
I cleaned better than she did. But she was always expected to cook
*and*
clean. We were much happier when I took over the cleaning duties.
She did what she was best at, I did what I was best at. The rest, we
split up according to who had the most energy that particular evening.
I was an early morning person, so I took the kids to Saturday morning
soccer, etc. She would alwayss have Sunday afternoon dinner ready,
smelling and tasting delicious.
It was very nice, and comfortable. Too bad life intervened, in the form
of another man.
I will *never* date a married woman, regardless of how beautiful and/or
anxiuos she is, because of my own personal experiences.
Sorry to dump on you once again.
John
|
233.70 | | SMURF::MSCANLON | a ferret on the barco-lounger | Thu Jul 25 1996 12:16 | 29 |
| I do the housework. Vaccuuming, cleaning, dusting, etc. weekly.
Rug shampooing as necessary. Wall washing and curtain turning in
spring and fall. I also do bill paying, checkbook management and
taxes. I am also in charge of scheduling doctor's & dentists' appts.,
car repair and maintenance appts., furnace cleanings, vets' appts,
animal maintenance (fish tanks), etc, etc...... I do the gardening
stuff (but I do not mow the lawn). I buy groceries and cook occasionally
(I am not a particularly good cook, and I have about the same affinity
for food preparation as I do for ironing). I do laundry, I do not iron
(ironing goes out every week).
He keeps the yard apparatus working (lawnmover, snowblower, etc),
mows the lawn, does snow removal, does various home improvement
type stuff. He'll cook if he feels like it. I always clean up
afterwards, regardless who cooks. Basically, he does what he wants
to do, I do what has to get done.
I work because I refuse to depend on anyone else for a living.
Dependence usually invites people who want to try and control your
behavior using money as a lever. I will not play that game.
Should I ever become independently wealthy :-), there are many
things I'd do besides watch daytime tv (heck, I rarely watch
nighttime tv), I have more hobbies than I have the time to
invest in them. :-)
Mary-Michael
|
233.71 | not anytime soon fer sure... | THEMAX::SMITH_S | | Thu Jul 25 1996 18:24 | 9 |
| My live-in girlfriend enjoys doing almost all the housework. I take out
the trash, and do occasional odds & ends to help her out. I'm really
fortunate since I'm somewhat lazy by nature. She doesn't mind doing my
laundry, cooking almost every night, cleaning regularly. Oh, I mow the
lawn unless she wants to (which she does often). She's a real busy body
because she works full time and goes to school full time as well. So
soon, she will be the major bread winner, and she'll be doing the
housework. Should I marry her or what.
-ss
|
233.72 | love love me do | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Thu Jul 25 1996 21:15 | 8 |
| >>Should I marry her or what.
Geez, don't ask that in here, the place is full of loosers when it
comes to relationships, it seems. Ideas like love, trust, forgiveness,
tolerance, compromise, conflict management, hope, seem to have lost out
to hate, fight, bitterness, niggle, grudge.
Kevin
|
233.73 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | watch this space | Fri Jul 26 1996 13:44 | 44 |
| I earn the money in our family right now, and Frank keeps the home up,
and watches kids during the day.
I try to give him at least an hour off to unwind as soon as I get home
from work. He needs the break. Saturdays I take on the kids and get
them off with me so Frank gets some "alone time" to do what he wants
without kids and assorted other kids underfoot. I either buy or make
breakfasts on the weekends.
I do the grocery and assorted other shopping. I fix half the evening
meals, except during the weeks when work gets in the way. Even then I
usually get the prep work out of the way. I can unload and load the
dishwasher and run it, but Frank has it held together with some sort of
Majick and he prefers running it, as when I do there is a guaranteed
puddle in the kitchen. His standards are higher than mine so he
usually vacuums and declutters, he did this when we were both working
outside the home as well.
We each handle our half of car care, lawn maintenance, although I do
the vegetable garden on my own with other friends. He isn't fond of
that kind of gardening. He does put up most of what I bring home to
freeze or can, but I also pitch in on that.
Frank works his butt off on a daily basis. When he goes back to school
or work we will have to readjust who does what again, so he doesn't
feel he is being taken advantage of. If that means bringing in a
housekeeper once or twice a week, so be it. I don't know how anyone
could think a full-time parent has time to do much else. Oh yeah, he
takes Atlehi and Carrie out to see friends, shuttles the bigger kids to
and from the pool, park and school and special events I do the Girl
Scouts for Carrie while he waches Atlehi in the evenings, and I work
from home when he does volunteer work so there is a parental unit
around. This is a good way to get run ragged.
Where did I learn this sort of thing? From my parents. Although mom
was a full-time homemaker, Dad also gave her a break on Saturdays and
sundays, fixed breakfast for all of us, and would mess around with us
for an hour or so when he got home from work, unless he was on a
deadline. He took us into work with him if there was no school and mom
had something she needed to do without kids.
Maybe this was the secret to 50 years of marriage?
meg
|
233.74 | | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:00 | 18 |
| Re: .71 and .72 ("Should I marry her or what?")
| Geez, don't ask that in here, the place is full of loosers when it
| comes to relationships, it seems.
Au contraire. This would seem to be the ideal place to ask.
First of all, Kevin, I resemble that remark...;-)
As for .71 (ss) - She sounds wonderful. Congratulations. Unfortunately,
nothing you describe gives the least hint as to how to answer your
question. Keep looking - not elsewhere, necessarily, but within her,
yourself, both your needs, and how you relate to each other. Chores aren't
THAT important! ;-)
tim
P.S. Bonus hint: neither is great sex. ;-)
|
233.75 | | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Fri Jul 26 1996 15:17 | 14 |
|
.71 I think the key here is that you both do what you enjoy doing
and neither one minds the distribution of work. IF, on the other hand
she was doing all this and felt you didn't do enough, then there would
be a problem, in my opinion of course. I not only believe in 'sharing'
of duties, but there can be compromises that may seem like one does
more than the other at times, but if it's between the two that this
is fine, I'm sure it comes out in the wash in other ways so to speak.
If there's love and support towards each other the 'duties' are minor.
Rosie
p.s. Marry her! It sounds like the two of you are fine with the way
things are and that's what is important.
|
233.76 | | THEMAX::SMITH_S | | Fri Jul 26 1996 18:58 | 4 |
| We've only been seeing each other for little more than one year. I
think I should wait to see if she's the right one. When I get married I
want it to be for good.
-ss
|
233.77 | | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Mon Jul 29 1996 09:39 | 2 |
|
for good,,,,, more ways than one!
|
233.78 | Compromise important for many reasons | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Jul 29 1996 12:55 | 22 |
| re .71
Do you know for sure that she doesn't mind doing all this stuff? It
sounds like she's setting herself up for serious burnout!!
I think compromise is really important, and that both people feel that
the distribution of labor is fair. Women need to get over the pressure
to 'do it all' and be superwomen. A lot of us take on more than we can
reasonably handle, and then wonder how we got so burned out. I'm sure
there are plenty of cases where the woman takes on the extra housework
herself, willingly, because we want to be able to handle everything.
What is so wrong with admitting, "There are things I'd like to spend a
little of my time doing, besides housework?" A fair-minded partner
should encourage this. True partners really encourage each other to be
happy, not over-burdened, able to enjoy life, and to equally split up
the workload. I sure wouldn't feel right with my husband doing all the
housework, as nice as it might be to not have to do it myself! Hey,
then he'd be too tired for the fun stuff;-)
It seems to take constant adjustments. And I've often heard that, in a
good relationship, people don't give just 50% each, they give 100%
each. This works. But not 100% for one, 25% for the other!
|
233.79 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 29 1996 13:51 | 9 |
| Clearly!! Your absolutely correct. But, in the same vaine, most seem to
think that men come home, open a can of beer, rubb their bellies, watch
tv and fart. I know that I was handling much of the outside work,
shoveling snow, painting houses, detailing the fleet(cars, wash, wax,
ensuring they are rolling stock vs dead stock), managing the apartment
building, balancing the books, working extra hours at work, going to
night school, trying to kick start a small business called a mini gym,
being a good husband, being a good father to a new daughter... super
what?
|
233.80 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 29 1996 13:56 | 3 |
| ...and mowing the lawns on two apartment buildings, helping the
extended family and their heart burns, mowing their lawns, shoveling
their snow, showing up for their problems.. super?
|
233.81 | Everybody is too busy these days | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Jul 29 1996 14:11 | 6 |
| No, I wasn't advocating guys trying to be superman either. Part of the
problem is that ALL of us seem to have overscheduled lives these days.
We all need more R&R.
I personally don't know any guys who come home, open a beer, turn on
the TV, rub their belly, and fart. Well, at least not the first 4.
|
233.82 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 29 1996 14:22 | 8 |
| .81 Yes, I will concure with this!! We all have stuck ourselves in the
fast lane/lan for success and with it comes the pearls of life. Looking
for utopia isn't what it once was. Looking for happiness is sometimes
as close as your own back yard. Learning to live with less in a demand
for all toys in the end isn't the final measurement. But we are all
driven like this.
|
233.83 | Be reasonable, do it my way! | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 29 1996 14:24 | 9 |
|
re .78
Nothing against you or your note, per se, but I tend to "turn off"
when someone starts talking about the need to "compromise" because
they are usually really talking about he need for _you_ to compromise.
fred():
|
233.84 | Not my problem | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Jul 29 1996 18:11 | 6 |
| re .83
I personally don't care if you turn off or not. If you don't want to
compromise in your relationship, that's your problem (and your wife's).
|
233.85 | No need to talk if you already are compromising | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Jul 29 1996 18:18 | 4 |
| re .83
Oh, and one more thing: If a person _already is_ compromising, (as in,
being fair) there's no need to talk about compromise, is there?
|
233.86 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 29 1996 18:23 | 9 |
|
re .84,
Didn't say that I don't compromise. Just that I've become somewhat
cynical of people who go around talking about how everyone else
should. Sort of like what I mentioned a while back about 1990's
doublespeak (a note on that should cause some lively discussion ;^) ).
fred();
|
233.87 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Jul 29 1996 18:50 | 16 |
|
> Didn't say that I don't compromise. Just that I've become somewhat
> cynical of people who go around talking about how everyone else
> should.
Sure, but Ms. Mattson's response to the original note (where the
guy admitted he was somewhat lazy by nature, with a girlfiend who'd
soon be both the major breadwinner _and_ doing the housework) was
completely reasonable, in context, and hardly a cause for any
cynicism. The situation did sound more than a little unusual.
In fact I'm still not sure if the comments were mostly serious or
tongue-in-cheek or what... ;-)
glenn
|
233.88 | | THEMAX::SMITH_S | | Mon Jul 29 1996 19:39 | 8 |
| No, they were serious. I guess you just have to know my girlfriend.
She is a real busy body. Always has to be doing something. Even while
relaxing she feels she should be doing the laundry, cooking, or some
sort of cleaning. She took her first semester off in 2 years from
school this summer because she needed more time to get settled in our
new place, and she is still pressed for minutes. It's not that I don't
do things around the house, rather, she just overly does her share.
-ss
|