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Reports

Of Laureates and Laundry

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Posted on Oct 27, 2009

By Ruth Marcus

“I bet he wasn’t folding laundry.”

Carol Greider, winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Medicine, on what she was doing at 5 a.m. when the big call came, and her thoughts on learning of President Obama’s prize.

Is there a woman around who read this quote and didn’t smile with recognition? Greider’s wry assessment encapsulates so much about the state of modern women: Nobel laureates, but also—if not inevitably, then at least overwhelmingly—laundry-folders, school lunch-makers, playdate-arrangers, schedule-managers. 

This is less a complaint than an observation. In fact, I think to some extent women are reluctant to yield dominion over the home front even as they become the majority of the paid work force.

“A Woman’s Nation Changes Everything,” is the title of a new report by Maria Shriver and the Center for American Progress. It does—and it doesn’t. The “Battle Between the Sexes is over. It was a draw,” Shriver writes. “Now we’re engaged in Negotiation Between the Sexes.”

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True, but from an unequal start, and with an unequal appreciation of that disparity. “Both sexes agree that women continue to bear a disproportionate burden in taking care of children and elderly parents, even when both partners in a relationship have jobs,” John Halpin and Ruy Teixeira write in one chapter of the report. 

Here’s the interesting subtext, though: 55 percent of women strongly agreed (and 85 percent overall agreed) with the statement that “in households where both partners have jobs, women take on more responsibilities for the home and family than their male partners.” Just 28 percent of men strongly agreed, and 67 percent agreed. That’s a pretty big perception gap.

Put President Obama down as a strong agreer. “Today’s Obama family is obviously not typical,” he told NBC’s Savannah Guthrie. “Five years ago, six years ago, though, we were having a lot of negotiations, because, you know, Michelle was trying to figure out, OK, if the kids get sick, why is it that she’s the one who has to take time off of her job to go pick them up from school, as opposed to me? If, you know, the girls need to shop for clothes, why is it that it’s her burden and not mine?”

The president said he had tried “to learn to be thoughtful enough and introspective enough that I wasn’t always having to be told that things were unfair. ... But, you know, there’s no doubt that ... men are still a little obtuse about this stuff and need to be knocked across the head every once in a while.”

I’m not averse to a bit of strategic head-knocking. But I think there is another, more subtle dynamic involved, one that may be hinted at in Greider’s laundry-folding. We want our husbands to pitch in—without being asked. At the same time, we are wary of ceding our control over the home front. Did Michelle really want Barack picking out her daughter’s clothes? We cling to our multitasking as much as we bemoan it.

Greider, I suspect, could easily hire someone to do the laundry. Yet there is something comforting in keeping a connection to mundane household tasks even when you’re running a major league research lab. Perhaps younger women don’t feel this tug toward domesticity. But for women of my generation there remains an impulse to live up to the standards of our stay-at-home mothers even as we race out the door each morning. 

Personally, doing the laundry doesn’t fill that need for me—although on the occasions when there is no outside help available and my husband has washed a load, I have found myself incapable of refraining from redoing his, shall we say, creatively folded shirts.

For me, the connection is in the kitchen: I feel better with a brisket in the freezer. The crazier my work schedule, the more I am apt to be up on Greider Standard Time, speed-cooking early in the morning for a dinner I might not make it home for. I could delegate more to my husband, but then I’d also have to accept that pasta with store-bought pesto equals dinner. If you want someone else to step up to the plate, you have to live with what he puts on it.   

My daughters, I expect, will find this spousal negotiation more matter-of-fact, less freighted with feminist symbolism. On the other hand, it never hurts to know how to make a decent brisket—or fold a shirt with Nobel-level finesse. 
     
Ruth Marcus’ e-mail address is marcusr(at symbol)washpost.com.
   
© 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By Tom Edgar, November 2 at 10:13 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re reading some of the above I just have to add this.

My daughter (early forties)Has been married twice.
The first was worth over a million, in dollars that is.
The second, a great improvement, is a University Professor.

Whenever I visited, both marital homes, I saw the husbands ironed their own shirts. Once she actually flattened an obnoxious male with two Kung Fu blows.
5feet tall; and 85lbs. Graduate Scientist/Artist.
You don’t have to be subservient to anybody nor a door mat for any man.

The man who bought my business asked for advice and I said, as I have said to others.“When you have too much on your plate learn to say NO.”  Goes for marriage too.

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By Tom Edgar, October 29 at 7:30 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

In Australia the U S A is often viewed as a matriarchal dominated society.  Doesn’t say much for the average OZ.

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By gerard, October 29 at 7:22 pm #

I could write a book on this subject, but suffice it to say that, if you are a wife and mother and also decide to be a working person or build a career after the kids get into their teens, prepare for censure either then or later. In spite of a kind husband, and “women’s lib” and all that, even a “modern” society like the U.S. today generally harbors hidden resentments against women who step outside traditional roles.  Which reminds me:
  If we realize it has taken us several hundred years to gradually get freer here, we should be able to understand the “burka” cultures better. One encouraging thing:  Once a social change reaches a certain turning point, of its own accord it seems to accelerate.

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By Outraged, October 29 at 1:00 am #

Quote: “Is there a woman around who read this quote and didn’t smile with recognition?”

Yes, me.  This type of blanket supposed acknowledgement and implied acceptance of a “woman’s” position (would you by any chance be speaking of a “real” woman), BY A WOMAN is one of the problems.  No, I didn’t “smile with recognition”.

Quote: “Perhaps younger women don’t feel this tug toward domesticity.”

I don’t know how old you are Ms. Marcus, but for me at 49 (and I speak only for myself).... NO, I never felt the tug, I did endure the DUMPING of all these tasks upon me, but “tug”.....NO.

Quote: “If you want someone else to step up to the plate, you have to live with what he puts on it.”

That depends.  If I engage in this same less than desirable outcome, then sure… I have no right to complain if he does.  However, if I take the time and effort to present a healthy or more desirable meal, then no….. there’s no reason I should simply “live with what he puts on it.”

Quote: “I have found myself incapable of refraining from redoing his, shall we say, creatively folded shirts.”

Truth be told, he doesn’t have to “creatively fold shirts”.  HE, can fold every bit as well as anyone, don’t cha’ think?  It’s questionable to me that one ADULT would be required to “redo” another ADULT’S “folding of shirts”.  Seriously.

This article says to me that supposedly men are too stupid or incompetent to do these things in an acceptable way and that only “us” women…. “get it”.  Talk about hook, line and sinker.  Do a lot of wash do ya’...?  Whatever.

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By MaryAnn Johanson, October 28 at 8:37 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

In fact, I think to some extent women are reluctant to yield dominion over the home front even as they become the majority of the paid work force.

Yield to whom?

You mention hiring someone to deal with the laundry: Is that really the solution, passing off the crappy work to another woman working for a lousy wage? (I know that I cringe at the thought of passing off the horrible work necessary to keep my life going to another woman… though perhaps my attitude would change if I could actually afford to hire a housekeeper. And I assume that if I ever could afford domestic help and I ever could overcome my reluctance to hire out my crap work, I’d overpay for the work out of guilt. As it is, I’m single and childless, so at least I only have to clean up my own messes, or live with them.)

You mention that you are “incapable of refraining from redoing [your husband’s], shall we say, creatively folded shirts”? Why? If he looks like a slob wearing a wrinkled shirt, do you honestly feel this a reflection on you? And if you do, isn’t that something that *you* need to deal with? Is your husband not his own person, responsible for himself? If he isn’t, why the hell not?

Some work has to be done: Clothes need to be washed, mouths need to be fed. They don’t need to be done to white-glove standards. If you’re holding yourself to such, you’ve got only yourself to blame. We need to pick our battles, and some of them simply are not worth fighting, never mind winning. Either your husband will be shamed by his wrinkled shirts, and then he’ll learn to fold and/or pick up an iron on his own, or he won’t, and then, who cares?

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By Tom Edgar, October 28 at 6:12 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

My wife worked part time keeping books and taking calls in my small home based business

She never mowed the grass nor vacuumed the house.
Resented if I tried to help with laundry, cooking, maybe she had a point.

She’s been gone thirteen years after forty six together.  Now I do everything which includes the meals for my son who has cancer.  I NEVER cook a frozen or prepared meal. Any time I have tried these apologies for food I have been totally underwhelmed
Well I have had over eighty years of learning and some of those at sea. With a Quaker woman who thought eggs should come from your own animals with vegetables from the garden and love from the heart
how could I not learn to pull my weight.

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By P. T., October 28 at 2:33 am #

I bet Michelle Obama wasn’t folding laundry either—or mowing the lawn.  Elites usually use immigrants for such tasks.

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