You’ve been working hard all day: endless stressful meetings and
arguments. You’re tired, feeling a bit sorry for yourself, looking
forward to a meal and a beer. And lots of sympathy from your wife.
Meanwhile,
she’s been juggling her job with managing the house: the cleaning,
shopping, and getting the children ready for bed. Now she can’t wait for
you to get home and take over, read the children a story and kiss them
goodnight. She’s tired, feeling a bit sorry for herself, looking forward
to a meal and a glass of wine. And lots of sympathy from you…
You can guess what’s going to happen next.
Disappointment. And resentment.
You’re
resentful because you feel she doesn’t appreciate how hard you work.
The pressure to succeed and earn more. All you want to do tonight is
wind down. So why won’t your wife stop nagging and understand how tired
you are?
She’s resentful because she
feels you underestimate her career – and don’t appreciate her work at
home. So when you finally arrive, she’s desperate for a break, and
annoyed at you going on as if you’re the only one entitled to feel
tired.
SELFISH, UNGRATEFUL
Every
couple feels their particular spouse is selfish and ungrateful. But
actually, the problem’s universal. It comes from modern ideas of
marriage.
They say you should both
work, because it’s the only way to fulfilment. And should both do the
housework and childcare, because anything else would be unfair.
But
exactly equal careers and 50/50 housework just simply never happen. And
so whoever’s doing the most housework feels resentful because society
tells them they’re doing something a bit sad.
While
whoever’s earning more feels resentful because they feel their partner
just doesn’t realise how stressed and exhausted they’re getting.
So the move towards equality in marriage has just replaced respect with resentment.
There’s
another problem. When couples try to split the housework 50/50 – the
cleaning, cooking and childcare – then their love life goes flat. That’s
because moving away from the traditional division of labour reduces
sexual satisfaction, especially hers.
OK,
I’m pretty sure wives really do feel closer to their husband when he
helps with the housework. As he should of course. But is she really
aroused by a man doing dishes? Because we’re often turned on at night by
exactly the same things we hate during the day. Like the woman who
wants her husband to take charge in bed. Next morning she’ll say he’s
controlling. So sadly, there’s a lot less romance in modern marriages.
And much more resentment.
That’s
because the sexes are not as interchangeable as they seem. It may go
against modern individualistic ideas, but maybe couples should be
searching for complementary lifestyles, rather than an exactly equal
split of the work. So they can both achieve more working together than
either could on their own.
And maybe
society should be more respectful of the partners’ equally important but
different contributions towards the relationship.
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