age gap support community


OUR SPONSOR: Best Young and Old Dating - perfect and safe on-line community for the young and old singles to meet and find exciting romances, warm companionship and more!






Study: Live-In Boyfriends Help With Housework More Than Husbands

Gypsyheart
08-12-2007, 09:26 PM
I thought this article was interesting. I'm sure some will disagree with this, but I personally think there's something to it. My ex got real arrogant and unhelpful about housework after a couple years of marriage. I have some gf's who say the same thing. It's one of many reasons, I will probably NOT marry again. I think the uncertainty of cohabitation lends to a healthier balance of power, but that's just me. -- gypsy

DISCLAIMER:
Hoping this thread doesn't get nasty. It wasn't meant to be a bash against marriage or anyone's husband.
(yes, I'm paranoid!)


Study: Live-In Boyfriends Help With Housework More Than Husbands

Sunday , August 12, 2007

If a woman finds that the kind and considerate man she has lived with for years suddenly stops helping with the washing and bridles at taking out the rubbish, it is probably because the couple have got married.

Academics have found cohabiting couples are far more likely than those who are married to split housework evenly — but after the wedding they revert to stereotype, with the woman taking on the great majority of tasks.

The study argues that the effect holds true even in couples with a strongly egalitarian outlook before they are married, at which point women become less likely to fight for their rights.

“Marriage is generally accompanied by expectations of permanence that may not be the case in a cohabiting relationship,” says the research by American academics to be published in the Journal of Family Issues.

“Cohabitors, therefore, may be more prone to aggressive bargaining when it comes to exchanges of time and effort in the household, and less willing to do more than what they perceive as their fair share.”

The researchers, based at North Carolina State and George Mason universities, took data from more than 17,000 people in 28 countries.

Overall, men averaged 9.41 hours’ housework per week and women 21.13 hours. It found that the higher the marriage rate in each country, the higher the proportion of housework carried out by women.

British men come in 10th place, performing 35 percent of chores, well below the most egalitarian countries of Denmark, Finland and Norway. The Scandinavian countries, as well as splitting housework more evenly, also have the highest cohabitation rates.

Anna Addison, 30, who lives in Middlesbrough with her husband Paul, said: “When we first moved in, the novelty of living together meant we shared the housework.

“It was the same for the first year after we got married, but when I got a nine-to-five job everything was left to the weekends and I ended up doing it all myself.

“Paul definitely changed after marriage. I do rely on him for some technical things in the house but, for housework, it’s just me now.”

Frank Hanna, co-founder of the Mediation Agency and author of a book on conflict resolution, said: “With cohabitation, to put it bluntly, there’s no contract and the likelihood of a more peaceful relationship is higher than in a marriage. When marriage takes place, the race is over. Men see the requirement to behave as starting to diminish.”

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293018,00.html

Kristin
08-13-2007, 10:01 AM
That's the women's fault. Why do they let the men get away with it?

I do more housework than Jeremy, but he works outside the home more hours than I do, so it evens out for me. If I have more hours at work a particular week, I expect him to step up.

Now that we are married, it'll be interesting to see what happens. But he was raised in a pretty equal household, so I suspect it'll be ok. We'll see!


EZ Archive Ads Plugin for vBulletin Copyright 2006 Computer Help Forum