Lesson to my daughter: Don’t clean your house
If as a mother, there’s one little tip you can pass on to your daughter that might help her enjoy a productive, happy and neurosis-free life, I reckon it’s this: don’t tidy your room.
I mean it. And here’s why. Amid all the extraordinary changes that have befallen Australian women over the past half-century (the surge into the workplace, reproductive freedom, no-fault divorce, military combat roles, Botox, the periodic arrival and departure of high-waistedness as a fashion trend), there is one significant feature of life that hasn’t changed very much at all; women still do about twice as much housework as men.
Now, there are two ways you can approach this disparity, as a gender.
You can whine and moan about men doing more. Or you can take the radical option and just do less yourself.
The Canadian writer Stephen Marche recently observed that, “housework is the only political problem in which doing less and not caring are the solution, where apathy is the most sensible and progressive attitude”.
And that’s the approach I have taken to heart. My house, where my partner and I and our three children live, is a glorious tribute to all the things that are more important than housework. Mine is one of those homes which would – should we ever feel like selling – need about two weeks of concerted scrubbing and sorting, and dusting-of-high-ledges and a vicious targeted eradication of old craft projects.
Mine is the sort of home where guests for lunch present – apart from menu planning – the added unspoken question as to whose job it will be to clear the dining room table of its drifts of paper, unopened letters and things that people dumped there on the way in from school.
Deposits of useful items (sticky tape, the rare and invaluable Pens That Work, the keys to my son’s toy handcuffs, spare batteries) cluster together on vulnerable surface areas like mice in a haystack.
My partner, Jeremy, is an intrepid housework-sharer, talented launderer and instinctively much tidier than I am. Yet we both work full-time and the numbers don’t lie; the hours in the day just aren’t sufficient to accommodate two working lives plus all the time we need to spend with our children.
And if it comes down to a choice between tidying the living room and making gingerbread with the children, then in my view there is no contest. Consequently, my house is what it is.
When The Weekly’s Editor-In-Chief Helen McCabe (in her matchlessly charming way) suggested a chat and possible family photograph after I published my book The Wife Drought, my policy was clear: sure, you can come and take pictures in our house, but I’m not tidying up.
Posing in an artificially tidied home, pretending we’re a relentlessly ordered family, would be a fib. Our house is messy. Messy is what it is.
In the end, we ended up in a studio, romping about self-consciously for photographs in an artfully disordered but controlled environment.
However, I like the way my house is. It’s like my parents’ house, on the Adelaide Plains farm where I grew up and where friendly disorder always reigned; Lego citadels, intricate costumes made out of paper shopping bags and the serial projects of my crafty, kitchen-innovator of a mother. She made her own soap. She wove her own baskets.
In a fabulous burst of activity, she once knitted a blanket from wool she had carded, spun and dyed herself, with wool shorn from our own sheep.
That blanket is – in any future will and testament – the only thing on which I really will insist.
My room was always a mess and it still is, and sometimes I think not minding about that is the greatest gift my mother has given me.Genuinely not minding that the kitchen cupboards are dusty – or that my desk is still cluttered with notes, splayed reference texts and illegible little Post-It notes from a book I finished writing nearly a year ago – is like a season ticket to the happiness that comes from doing other things.
One of the reasons the housework debate is so diabolical – and why, in countless households across Australia, the dishes and the recycling, and the timeless dispute about whose job it really is to clean the toilet carry such potential for discord – is that men and women often have asymmetric standards about what constitutes an acceptable level of clean.
It’s one thing to agree that housekeeping will be split equally, but it’s another thing entirely to reach agreement upon the absolute minimum that must be done and this is where the frustration often erupts.
One party might think that a kitchen bench is clean if it’s been given an optimistic swipe with a dingy Chux. The other, meanwhile, might be incapable of sleep until it’s been fully cleared and disinfected.
Why do women, on average, have higher standards? Well, it’s not the case in my household, so I’m an unreliable witness, but my best guess is that it’s because women have more skin in the game than men.
An untidy house belonging to the Brown family is far more likely, in local gossip, to be “Mrs Brown’s filthy house” than “Mr Brown’s filthy house”.
And, you know, every now and again, when I’m rampaging through the house looking for nail scissors or that birthday present I bought two days ago for the kids’ party to which we are, right at that minute, already 20 minutes late, I do feel the siren call of orderliness and wish I had one of those houses in which minimalist furniture sprawls languidly across vast empty planes of dust-free space, interrupted only by the odd witty vase or coffee-table book about wallpaper.
Yet then I remember. Skiving off housework is my international ticket to more fun things, like hanging out with my slightly dishevelled children. A bit of mess never hurt anyone, after all.
Don't clean your house
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- Saria Dragon of the Rain Wilds
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Don't clean your house
http://www.aww.com.au/latest-news/lets- ... hter-20482
Nonsense, I have not yet begun to defile myself.
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You know...do dishes. Take out the trash. Clean out the toilet and sink, the shower periodically. Dust if you have to. Aside from that...who cares. If the Pope decides to drop by for a visit, maybe I'll be embarrassed I haven't made my bed or folded/put away any laundry in years-------meantime I've got cartoons to watch, here. I have a comics backlog. And let's not even get into my games Stack. I have better things to do than try to impress the nobody that will ever come over.
I'm plenty neurotic enough without having some OCD tidiness obsession added in on top.
I'm plenty neurotic enough without having some OCD tidiness obsession added in on top.
boo--------------a real american weirdo
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People ask me things like what shows I watch on tv. They seem to believe I do things like care about the appearance of my home.
I barely have the time to make the things I want to as-is. I have a lot of computer games, too. When would I do this stuff? That whole lifestyle, I'm sure it's comforting for some people but it certainly isn't me, I have stuff to do that I actually give a damn about.
I barely have the time to make the things I want to as-is. I have a lot of computer games, too. When would I do this stuff? That whole lifestyle, I'm sure it's comforting for some people but it certainly isn't me, I have stuff to do that I actually give a damn about.
I muttered 'light as a board, stiff as a feather' for 2 days straight and now I've ascended, ;aughing at olympus and zeus is crying
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There is a different between messy and unhealthy. For the people who lives in their own homes, why wouldn't you clean it? I call it being proud of something that you've worked for. You don't wanna panic every time someone comes over and rush around throwing things in cupboards when you could've spent 30-60 minutes cleaning before. It's the same thing looking after your car, if you don't care about it or don't make time for it it's gonna to worst later on. Keep it clean and serviced and be proud in the work you do.
- Booyakasha
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^Think there's a difference between not caring overly much about tidiness and not caring at all about maintenance. I might let the empties in my den stew for a week at a time, but I damn sure noticed when the heater started going nuts a couple months back (would have been hard not to have--------heard the sumbitch all the way out on the street). Don't let's conflate the two.
boo--------------a real american weirdo
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*gestures at piles of notebooks, stacks of printed, edit-scrawled manuscripts, over-stuffed bookshelves, pens, post-its, other stationary scattered everywhere* The reason I don't much concern myself in having a spotless house is PRECISELY BECAUSE I take pride in the work I do. *motions towards the vast array of decorations, trinkets, knick-knacks, all the everything strewn about the room* My work is my writing and my chaos is comfortable and inspiring. My work and pride does not lay in having a barren, unlived-in display home where I'm either too scared to do anything in my own space for fear of making a mess, or spending all my time keeping things "perfect" rather than working on my stories. Messy is happiness for creatives. Strict, stark tidiness is just... Bleh. Gag. Dead.
Nonsense, I have not yet begun to defile myself.
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[QUOTE="Sim Kid, post: 1533568, member: 22276"]I annoyed my parents because I caught onto their parentisms.
"We have company coming - why is your bedroom a mess?"
"I wasn't aware that your coworkers will be going upstairs..."[/QUOTE]
When I was over 20 and shared a house with my mother, she used to take anything I left out like just a hat or a magazine on an end table and put it on my bed while I wasn't around. I started doing the same to her because I thought it was hilarious. Turns out, she didn't think the same logic applied to her. Which, trust me, made sure I kept doing it.
"We have company coming - why is your bedroom a mess?"
"I wasn't aware that your coworkers will be going upstairs..."[/QUOTE]
When I was over 20 and shared a house with my mother, she used to take anything I left out like just a hat or a magazine on an end table and put it on my bed while I wasn't around. I started doing the same to her because I thought it was hilarious. Turns out, she didn't think the same logic applied to her. Which, trust me, made sure I kept doing it.
I muttered 'light as a board, stiff as a feather' for 2 days straight and now I've ascended, ;aughing at olympus and zeus is crying
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