Hard to believe? Then maybe you’ll believe a study which concluded that marriages where the women do all the housework while the men retreat to the parlor to smoke cigars, read the newspaper and discuss politics with other men in top hats are happier.
Technically, that study was based on focus groups of landed gentry horse farm owners in Greenwich, CT in 1879. But now a brand new study appears to validate those previous findings.
A recently released study by Norwegian researchers reports that the divorce rate among couples who share the housework equally is 50% higher than those where the woman does most of the housework. “The more a man does in the home, the higher the divorce rate,” said Thomas Hansen, co-author of the study titled Equality in the Home.
One conclusion emerges: Norwegian researchers apparently hate women. Another theory is that Norwegian men suck at doing chores. Still another theory is that lead researcher Thomas Hansen has a serious axe to grind over the fact his ex-wife, Ingebjørg, took him to the cleaners in their divorce. But that’s just my wife’s theory, and she’s never particularly cared for Norwegian men.
Experts have weighed in with other more credible theories in an attempt to explain these startling findings. Perhaps more “modern” marriages, based on equally shared roles in housework and decision making, have a less “sacred” view of marriage “till death do us part” than traditional marriages. Another theory is that in more egalitarian marriages, where housework is equally shared, the woman is more likely to have her own career, may be less financially dependent on her spouse and thus better able to leave a bad marriage.
These theories are, of course, wrong. The real explanation is that women find doing chores like unclogging the toilet deeply fulfilling. They take personal pride in managing all domestic matters so their hard-working husbands can kick off their shoes after a day at the office updating their Facebook status and tweeting about last night’s game on ESPN.
Women are happiest, this study conclusively proves, when they can come home from their own day job to make a healthy home-cooked dinner, clean up the dirty dishes, do the laundry, help their 2.5 kids with their homework, and then dress like a hooker at bedtime for their husband’s amusement. They are content not to interfere with their tired husband’s enjoyment of Monday Night Football. After all, the Patriots are playing the Packers.
Norway, where this study was conducted, is one of the most egalitarian societies in the world, especially if you’re a man. And this groundbreaking study, sponsored by the Oslo Elks Lodge # 27, shows that husbands who care about their marriage know to step out of the way and let their little lady take charge as CEO of Household Cleaning Inc. A good way for men to step out of the way is to play a round of golf, or if you happen to live in Norway, go ice fishing. Don’t worry about your wife missing out. She’s having way too much fun picking up your clothes and dirty dishes so she can get the house ready for your weekly poker night with your golf / ice fishing buddies.
Other related studies support the findings of the Norwegian researchers. A recent Italian study found that women who chronically complain about their husbands’ tawdry extra-marital affairs are more likely to cause their marriage to end in divorce. Another study showed that male partners who engage in frequent episodes of promiscuous sex with other females are often held in higher esteem by their female partners. However, scientists are split over the relevance of these findings to American marital happiness since the study involved Proboscis Monkeys in Borneo.
One thing is clear: men who care about the well-being of their marriage know that when it comes to chores, women are the superior sex. If you feel compelled to help with the chores, experts suggest badly mangling the task. Try washing the whites with the colored fabrics so that her egg shell blouse turns pinkish blue. This will ensure that your wife never entrusts you with the laundry ever again, and you’ll have taken a big stride towards cementing a happy marital partnership.
Listen to the Norwegians. They invented IKEA and cheese slicers, so they know a thing or two about social progress. When they say that men sharing in the housework is a one-way ticket to Divorceland, men should follow these instructions (which, by the way, are much easier to follow than the assembly instructions on your typical IKEA TV cabinet.)
Interviewed about the results of the Norwegian study, Wayne Finsterbottom of Sioux Falls, SD, proclaimed, “I totally believe these findings. That’s why I have let go of my selfish pattern of depriving my wife, Edna, of the pleasure of doing all the chores. But there is a downside to my thoughtfulness. Today I noticed that Edna missed a large section of grouting in the bathroom tile. Last week she did a slipshod job ripping up the downstairs carpeting and installing and staining the wood flooring. I thought the stain came in a shade too light, and I told her so.” Mrs. Finsterbottom was unavailable for comment as she was in the backyard, raking leaves.
The study also shows that in homes were they hire a cleaner that they all live happily ever after.
I’ll tell you my life is pretty happy and I do almost no housework. I’ll start telling her that it’s because I want her to be more fulfilled in the relationship.