How Humans Handle Housework

Minimizing gender disparities in house chores means reconsidering some deeply held societal truths.

How Humans Handle Housework

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In 2019, Sophie Knight reflected on the unusual way she and her husband tried to deal with the imbalance of time spent on home chores: He paid her for housework. “It made sense to us,” she wrote: “While our goal was to divide the work equally, I ended up doing much more because he worked in an office and I worked at home as a freelancer, using my breaks to cook, vacuum, and do laundry.”

Ultimately, the couple found that communicating about the imbalance and finding a compromise was more sustainable than the invoicing method. But it’s not easy to work through this sort of discrepancy. The straight couples who do so are fighting against an entire cultural history: “Caretaking is a central way that women perform their gender,” my colleague Annie Lowrey wrote recently. Getting to a more equal setup means reconsidering some deeply held societal truths. But on the other side of this effort might be a world where women feel content to put down the vacuum and say, “It’s clean enough.”

Today’s newsletter is a collection of stories on the gender gap in housework, as well as how the human mind thinks about chores and cleaning.


On Cleaning

My Husband Paid Me to Do Housework

By Sophie Knight

We wanted to address a systemic, gendered imbalance. It didn’t really work.

Read the article.

Put Down the Vacuum

By Annie Lowrey

Americans need to get off the tidiness treadmill.

Read the article.

Why People Wait 10 Days to Do Something That Takes 10 Minutes

By Amanda Mull

Chores are the worst.

Read the article.


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P.S.

Image of the sea at low tide
Courtesy of Joe Brennan

I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparks their sense of awe in the world. Joe Brennan, 73, sent this photo “taken at low tide in San Felipe Baja California.”

I’ll continue to feature your responses in the coming weeks.

— Isabel