|
Lasting benefits of 'magic mushrooms' Are top swimmers doping? U.S. tennis player's amazing rant against female tennis stars DNA tests sniff out mutts' breeding Court rules in favor of Second Amendment gun right What makes someone an adult? Get high before you fly Man loses 75 pounds on McDonald's diet High school girls make pact to get pregnant The smartest (and dumbest) dog breeds June 06 July 06 August 06 September 06 October 06 November 06 December 06 January 07 February 07 March 07 April 07 May 07 June 07 July 07 August 07 September 07 October 07 November 07 December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 June 06 May 06 April 06 March 06 February 06 January 06 December 05 November 05 October 05 September 05 August 05 July 05 June 05 May 05 April 05 Blog RollAsk The Californian Editorials Entertainment Eye of Bakersfield Faith Forum Fired Up! Inside Sports Neighbors Right Thinking Sound Off Talk of the Town
RSS 2.0![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
|
Husbands: Hide this from your wives!
A story moved on our wires today about a University of Michigan study which found having a husband creates an extra seven hours of housework a week for the wife. Meanwhile, a man saves an hour a week of housework by having a wife. You can read the whole story here. Husbands: Your wife has probably got enough to moan about without you telling her about this study. Wives: Try to temper the ill-feeling that this study brings you and accentuate the positive. Namely, that for every hour you're cooking and cleaning, your husband is able to watch baseball for an additional 8.5 minutes.
6 comments from 5 users
1
posted by
catpaw
on May 9, 2008 at 04:07 PM
If the typical wife is like mine, she makes it harder on herself by not being practical. I do help my wife with housework. You familiar with dishwasher soap? Great stuff for getting clothes clean and I use it to do my own gym laundry. She gets upset because I used the dishwasher. And why is cooking such a chore? When it's my turn to cook, I get fried chicken or pizza. Sometimes I make sandwiches. I tell I'm saving energy. She doesn't have an answer for that because she just turns away without saying anything. posted by
bakoblue
on May 9, 2008 at 04:19 PM
Well, allow me to go on the record as saying that I would have to do tons more work around the house if it were not for my spouse. He does the bulk of the laundry, shopping, cleaning, dishes and yard work --- and that's just off the top of my head. And he rarely watches baseball :o) posted by
OldBlue56
on May 9, 2008 at 04:39 PM
I used to do a lot more housework while my wife was at work, but then I discovered this damn blog.... posted by
NancyII
on May 9, 2008 at 07:13 PM
Had a test of will with my ex once. He would come in, sit in the recliner, take his shoes and socs off and drop the socks beside the chair. I finally rebelled and refused to pick them up. He refused to pick them up. The pile had gotten quite high when the MIL called and said she was coming over. Guess who won the test of wills? No wife will let her MIL come over with a stack of dirty socks on the liv. rm. floor. The hubby doesn't care since he knows every MIL knows the wife is never good enough for her boy and the bad wife is just a bad housekeeper. posted by
johnburnssucks
on May 9, 2008 at 10:03 PM
Nancy, you should have taken the socks out to the driveway, soaked them with a flammable liquid, and torched them off. posted by
catpaw
on May 10, 2008 at 06:57 AM
Strange you should mention that, Nancy. My brother-in-law is a slob. My sister takes it with a sense of humor (up to a point) and refers to socks and dishes strewn about as his "droppings." Fortunately, I wasn't raised that way by my mother. I have childhood scars on my head to prove it. For all my shortcomings, being a slob is not one of them. Maybe that's why I'm not my wife's "ex." That a wife is never good enough for mommy's little boy seems to be a universal axiom. If I'd waited and shopped around I'd have done so much better. Our child, however, is something else. She's perfection from heaven. Thank God, she spent enough time with grandma to learn the things my wife would have never got around to teaching.(sigh)
1
|