Am I being unfair to my husband?
It is a gray spring Saturday in 2016, the day before Mother’s Day. There’ve been ten days of rain preceding this one, and I’ve spent half of those in Michigan with my kids, without their father, visiting my parents. I love taking my daughters to Detroit, but solo-parenting Liv and Tess is draining, not least because I am the only person available to issue and enforce the dreary commands of early childhood, the ones that begin upon waking and do not cease until it is night and the weight of their petal-soft eyelids has finally become too heavy to resist. Use the potty. Brush your teeth. Put on your socks. Put on your shoes. Don’t hit your sister. Clean up the basement. Take off your shoes. Put on your shoes. Don’t hit your sister. Take off your shoes.
When we return to New York, I decide that what I’d like most on the occasion of this Mother’s Day is time to myself. I ask George to take our girls, then six and three, to visit his mother at her nursing home in Pennsylvania overnight. Ruth will be elated. George will feel good about spending the holiday with his mom. The kids will eat ice cream and play at Chuck E. Cheese and swim in the hotel’s indoor pool. Everybody wins.
As George is leaving for the gym that morning before the trip, he stops, choosing his words with the care of the married, and says to me: “I’m going to pack for the kids, but if you can think of anything that I might forget, could you lay it on the bed?”
If you are a mother or a father, or have kept close company with a person who is a mother or a father, it probably will not surprise you to learn that George has never packed for our children. In the six and a half years since we became parents, I have done all the packing and all the other things like packing, and my husband knows—both because I have insistently brought it to his attention for the past few years and because I have deemed its occurrence nothing less than the starting point for a book—that I am no longer happy to take care of it for him. The social science research underscores that we are well within the norm in two regards. Our transition to parenting has not been easy on our relationship, and our division of labor has been front and center in that unease, a dusting of gunpowder ever ready to blow.
I am as careful as my husband when I respond. I want to be kind without losing my commitment to refusing responsibility for every detail and reinforcing this maddening system we have constructed in which I am the handler of all things. I ask him, “What is it that you think you are likely to forget?”
He thinks. “Their bathing suits,” he says.
“Well, see, now you’ve remembered,” I say, sounding to my ear like the equanimous badger mother in the Frances children’s books. I love her. He nods and heads out the door.
A part of me feels good about the exchange. I’ve stood up for myself, I’ve been good-humored about it, and George will remember the bathing suits (which the girls will gleefully sleep in when he ultimately forgets their pajamas). But the devil on my shoulder—the one internalized over decades of white noise about women and their responsibilities and their relative place—eggs me on: You’re not being fair to him. He’s taking them away, after all. Just throw some stuff together. It’s only a one-night trip. It’ll take you thirty seconds. What’s the goddamn big deal? I gather the iPad and some toys and put them in a bag, an offering to the devil, and to my husband, to whom I wish above all else to be fair.
In 2003, when I was thirty, my friend Tanya gave birth to her first child. She was a few years older than I was and—because this was New York, the city of advanced maternal age—the first of my local peers to have a baby. Some months later, she became the first of my group to become a full-time working mother, and then the first to fall out of touch because of the new demands on her time. We’d try, about every six weeks, to get together, but it never seemed to happen. Finally, one afternoon on the phone, Tanya explained to me, as if it all made perfect sense, that she just was not ever going to be able to meet for dinner because her husband couldn’t be alone with the baby all evening long. John’s job entailed entertaining clients, so I knew Tanya was often by herself after work with their son. If she could manage that, why couldn’t he? I wondered. She hemmed before offering, “He wouldn’t.” I asked why not. We went back and forth like that for some time. I hung up feeling puzzled by and disdainful of what she seemed to be letting her husband get away with, the renunciation of so much responsibility. Both of them worked. Why would they be less than equal partners at home? It defied all reasonable explanation.
The punch lines to this story are neither few nor far between. Suffice it to say that six years later, I found myself co-parenting with a husband as well. This was a fortunate situation, all nicely planned and smoothly realized. But it wasn’t long after our first daughter was born that I remembered Tanya’s plight because now it was mine, and if it was mine, it was also that of most of the working mothers I came to know in my dual-breadwinner neighborhood in a leafy stretch of Queens. Like me, the women I met through the comings and goings at preschool and playground worked full-time, and like me, postpartum, they’d found themselves shouldering the bulk of all the theretofore unimagined burdens at home. I saw this not only among my neighborhood friends but also, because I’m a therapist, among my patients. In my office on the border between Chelsea and Midtown, I watched it begin as early as pregnancy. Twenty-eight weeks along and in her maternity work clothes, a woman would observe with some surprise and a nascent exasperation: “Jason seems really invested in what kind of stroller we get, but he’s also completely taking for granted that I’m going to do all the research.” I’d hold my tongue because my first reaction seemed unkind and overly cynical. But what I couldn’t help thinking was: And so it begins.
Here is where it began for me. The first fight I had with my husband about the shared responsibilities of parenthood occurred when our daughter Liv was not yet a month old. I was on what passes for maternity leave, taking eight unpaid weeks off from the clinic where I was finishing my post-doc hours. George, whom I’d met in grad school, was working as a psychologist for the NYPD, a city job with good benefits and a nine-to-five schedule. I was enjoying my time at home with the baby as much as anyone on an infant’s sleep schedule with engorged breasts can. Unable to rest during the day, I took computerized practice tests for my licensing exam while Liv napped, and on a few beautiful fall afternoons, she and I met friends taking their lunch hours on the lawn in Bryant Park. It all looked downright hedonistic to my husband, also tired, and stuck in a small, windowless office in Lefrak City Plaza, interviewing police officer candidates seven and a half hours a day.
George had been accustomed to going to the gym most nights after work, and a couple of weeks following our daughter’s birth, he wanted to resume. It was a benign enough request from his perspective—which was then and, really, to this day remains much different from mine. He had long days at the office and wanted to work out. I had long days at home with our newborn and wanted some relief. Though I can no longer remember with great clarity what was so hard about being alone with one baby (ask any mother of two or more children, she is likely to say the same thing), I do recall the frayed nerves stoked by Liv’s uninterrupted wailing each evening between four and seven o’clock in those first months. It’s called “the witching hour.” Google it along with the word “baby,” and you’ll be directed to a series of websites that advise mothers how to manage this daily period of extreme fussiness. The sites direct their reassurances to women: “Remember, you haven’t done anything wrong, you’re not a terrible mother, and this is normal.” If George came directly home after work, he arrived at five-forty-five; the gym meant seven at best.
When I explained this to my husband, he did not immediately come around to my position. George believed me unsympathetic to his need to blow off steam. He was wrong—my consideration of him simply didn’t extend so far as to obliterate my own needs in unrelenting service to his. There were a few days of mutual hostility before we managed to agree that he would go to the gym before work. His concession solved the material problem but presented with some umbrage. Despite having arrived at a solution that took both of us into account, George seemed to hold on to the idea that I was in the wrong—and also feeble (clearly) and capriciously imposing. In my mind, our very mutual and well-considered decision to start a family was now putting limits on his freedom, as it was on mine. In his mind, or so his attitude implied, those limits were not meant to be borne by him. We’d been together six years, and I’d learned to read his glances—before Liv, rife with love or good humor or the desire to be left to himself. When our daughter was born, a new category of glance: What (the fuck) was my problem? Why had I become so demanding? At great cost, I took this to heart. Maybe I should just accept my role as primary parent with grace. It wasn’t like he didn’t help at all.
I continued to struggle against this glance—both internally and with him—as the years passed and we had a second child. My requests for more help were sporadically heeded, but only after some fighting and a fraught reminder or two, each one serving to reinforce the same implicit bottom line: Our children’s needs were my responsibility. “My resentment” became a topic of conversation in our eventual couples therapy, George oblivious to the punch he delivered to my gut each time he referred to my anger in that way, as if it were a rash on my back that had broken out spontaneously, nothing to do with him. Speaking from experience, our avuncular therapist offered this: “The way we actually live seems to have not caught up with our relatively new ideals.” Why had no one told me this before?
Of course, Tanya had, six years earlier, but I’d imagined her as one woman and not every. Gender dynamics had changed so much since my own childhood—at least that was the impression I had before becoming a parent. And yet here were George and I, adhering to these domestic scripts long past their sell-by dates. By the time Liv turned one, I’d gleaned that any story I might have told about my husband’s striking ability to abdicate domestic burdens—to fail to even know of their existence—might have been relayed by any mother I knew. There were small children dressed in the wrong season’s clothes, permission slips that remained in folders unsigned, the consistent failure to pack any sort of supply. (“Did you remember diapers?” George would ask me in a slightly accusatory tone each time we got into the car.) A message was delivered, unspoken but clear. Not my job.
The husbands I knew, my own included, were engaged in myriad ways with their children—nothing like the retro stereotype of the guy who rarely left the office and refused to wipe a tiny dirty ass. But once they’d outpaced Don Draper in the annals of fatherhood, these men seemed content to retreat to their beds with their phones. We each, male and female, lived with an awareness of a recent past in which nothing much was expected of fathers at home. So who were all us mothers to be angry, to fail to greet every participation by our partners with less than a dozen roses and applause?
As for these otherwise decent men, their awareness that they were more involved than the fathers of yesteryear also led to much confusion, to their inability to absorb and respond to their wives’ levelheaded rejoinders that this more was not enough. I became my own worst enemy, conflicted about my right to ask, self-conscious about my rising anger, and too often stuck with the choice between fighting or just taking care of it, whatever it was, on my own. It was disheartening. All around me, women articulated their frustrations to each other before minimizing them into oblivion. “At least he helps,” I heard these women say, abashed by their own fury and protective of their partners’ best intentions. That no man in history had ever been in the position to utter that phrase—“At least she helps”—was a thought we weren’t eager to entertain. A mother, by writ of her sex, was partnered in the joys of parenthood but not likewise in its recalcitrant burdens: the packing of diapers, the buying of presents, the planning of meals, the searching for child care, the sorting and storage of hand-me-downs. We could question the moral rightness of this truth but not ever hope to one day see it change.
It takes time, in those early years of parenthood, for some difficulties to become self-evident, and I cannot recall when annoyance turned to deep disharmony for me, at what juncture watching my husband start to eat while I once again cut up our toddler’s food became enough to leave me aggrieved for hours. It was the constant thrum of little things.
Together we adored Liv. Alone I made lists in my head of the particulars necessary to sustain her. Did my eagerness to gestate and nurse our child lead to a tacit agreement that her maintenance was my responsibility? I took it on as if this were so. If I hadn’t looked for a babysitter and then day care, would George have?
Once I found a preschool, I became responsible each Sunday night for packing Liv’s bag for the week and making sure it arrived Monday morning (my day for drop-off), clean sheet for naptime inside. Only on the rare week with a Monday holiday was I confronted by the fact that George, responsible for Tuesday drop-off, didn’t even know about the Sunday-night bag, with its fresh linens and extra clothes. Those weeks, if her teacher failed to mention it, Liv would nap on a bare cot because her father had failed to bring in her things, and then the same held true for our second daughter three years later. Hardly the end of the world for the kids. But then for me it was. Because, you see, I was living like a second-class citizen in my own home. I tried to communicate my unhappiness to George, but he could only hear it as criticism, and then I never got through. Bag? What damn bag?
In light of social progress, when much has changed for women in the public realm, one might be forgiven for not intuiting the limitations of those changes in the private one. Among that morass, George and I became parents—with the vague assumption that we were in it together, and no concomitant sense of all we were working against or the effort it might take to achieve that. I took to reading about the problem.
At a friend’s recommendation, I picked up The Second Shift, sociologist Arlie Hochschild’s thirty-year-old detailed account of the ways in which heterosexual couples of the 1970s and ’80s organized their work and home lives. I identified so strongly with the thin-stretched mothers in her study that it became the first academic book to ever make me cry (this was after the birth of our second daughter, Tess, at which point all the managing had really worn me down). Hochschild follows a handful of families over the course of some years, observing each of the men and women involved as they work to make cognitive peace with the always uneven distribution of labor in their homes—that many of those couples wound up divorcing illuminates at what cost the chimera of harmony.
What stood out most to me, though, was Professor Hochschild’s revelation in her preface that her female undergraduates at Berkeley in the ’80s didn’t “feel optimistic that they [would] find a man who plans to share the work at home.”1 By the 1990s, my classmates and I at the University of Michigan would have predicted just the opposite: Of course our husbands would share. Clearly, our expectations for our lives near the turn of the century were more optimistic than Hochschild’s sample. It is only in retrospect that we can know they have gone largely unrealized.
Once I started reading, there was no shortage of material. At the end of 2015, Newsweek reported on a study of two hundred couples out of Ohio State, “Men Share Housework Equally, Until the First Baby.”2 The study found that members of working couples each performed fifteen hours per week of housework before having kids. Once they had children, though, women added twenty-two hours of child care while men added only fourteen, the latter also compensating by eliminating five hours of house care (women maintained their fifteen).
Younger dads, who came of age in more theoretically egalitarian times, were no better. “Millennial Men Aren’t the Dads They Thought They’d Be,” wrote The New York Times in July 2015,3 citing social science research out of the University of California, Santa Barbara, that found that men eighteen to thirty have more contemporary attitudes about gender roles in marriage than their predecessors, but “struggle to achieve their goals once they start families.”
A Pew Research Center survey in the same year found that men believe they are carrying equal weight at home, but their wives see it differently. Sixty-four percent of mothers reported they did more to manage their children’s needs than their husbands. Forty-one percent of fathers versus 31 percent of mothers told Pew that their responsibilities were shared equally4. A 2017 Economist survey of parents in eight Western countries bore approximately the same result (46 percent of fathers versus 32 percent of mothers reported that tasks were shared).5 Multiple observations of the problem in social science publications read something like this one from the Journal of Marriage and Family: “Because of the potential benefit of sharing family work, the rapid increase in women’s labor force participation, and increasing popular endorsement of equity ideals in marriage, many . . . predicted that the division of household labor would become more gender-neutral. Nevertheless, studies . . . seem to offer little support for this notion. This left researchers with a major unanswered question: ‘Why don’t men do more?’”6
This was the question, too, in the background of the lives of the mothers I knew, even the ones who’d married self-identified feminists and assumed their shared ideology would translate into lived experience. Most often it did not. And so my friend Lisa, at the apex of her rage about her husband’s general absence and failure to participate, sliced her hand open while chopping vegetables, a too literal Freudian slip that left her heavily bandaged and unable to complete a slew of necessary tasks with their toddler for weeks. My friend Beth refused to have a second child when her husband wouldn’t promise greater involvement the next time around (they eventually had another anyway; at least this time she knew what she was getting into, she told me with a sigh and a shrug). My friend Sara, to ensure her husband’s equal sharing upon the birth of their second son, devised a plan in which neither would ever be alone with their boys, necessitating shifts in both their work schedules and a relinquishing of all adult-exclusive social activities. In need of help in the mornings before work, my patient Andrea created a Google calendar that went as far as to schedule wake-up times for her husband during the week; on the many days he still chose to sleep in, she made the family’s lunches with a half-dressed toddler tugging at her skirt. Other women I knew managed as well as they could until they couldn’t any longer, and then fought with their children’s fathers and watched as little changed. In the end, no effort ever seemed to take. This was just the way it was, and no one involved could say exactly why, or reconfigure the momentum in a more balanced and equitable way.
“I think it’s biological,” asserted my mother, in town for a visit, as we followed my daughters around the outdoor play space at the New York Hall of Science. “Women are naturally more in tune with their children’s needs.” I cringed at the suggestion. It irritated my intellectual sensibilities. My mother—a social worker who’d once marched for the Equal Rights Amendment and had spent my adolescence telling me how much happier she would’ve been had she worked outside the home when my sister and I were young—had recently begun calling herself a conservative and saying things like “I wish I had just realized that my children were the most important thing.” But I balked, too, because I’d had the same thought about nature and its inescapable proclivities. My hypervigilant orientation to my daughters’ requirements often felt outside of my control, no easier to resist than a rubber tomahawk to the knee. George could arrive home late from an evening out with two tired kids and immediately disappear into the bathroom to brush his own teeth. I wanted the girls changed and in front of the sink themselves before I might begin to consider my own needs. “I’d have taken care of it if you had just waited,” my husband would chide me once they were in bed. But really, I could not.
“It’s a personality thing,” said Ellen Seidman, a writer, editor, and mother of three in New Jersey whose blog post about her “seeing superpower”—the motherhood equivalent of leaping tall buildings in a single bound—had attracted my attention on Facebook. “It’s my experience, between me and my friends, that women tend to be more detail-oriented about household tasks and child care.” With this, Seidman was offering a less deterministic version of my mother’s paean to biology. She went on, “I happen to be especially detail-oriented. I notice things. I have my systems in place. I know that I need to call the doctor next week to book my kids’ physicals for the fall, and that I need to hire the photographer we see once a year to take our family photos. I have material and mental lists. My husband doesn’t. It’s not his MO.” Clearly, women are no more likely than men to be inherently organized, and Seidman also acknowledged that this tendency to be more attentive to the needs of others is one that she’s chosen to cultivate in her home life, sparing her husband the trouble.
Calling herself powerful underscores her pride in her capability and in the good care she takes of her family. I can relate. It also tempers her frustration with the lower-status position she occupies in her home, the one left to do all the seeing. “We watched our mothers running our households and our fathers passively letting that happen,” she said, adding that she hopes for something different for her own daughter. “Those are the gender stereotypes we learn. They don’t just go away because more and more couples are dual income. It’s a cycle. I’m not sure how one breaks it.”
“Male privilege,” said my then-childless best friend from college when I asked her what she made of it. Patriarchy, the relic I once thought I’d dodged by being born in the right place at the right time. (Ha.) It is a truism that motherhood makes many women feminist. As Jane O’Reilly wrote in the cover story of the inaugural edition of Ms. magazine back in 1971, “In the end we are all housewives, the natural people to turn to when there is something unpleasant, inconvenient or inconclusive to be done.”7 Nothing in modern life so much as parenthood creates more tasks befitting that description—all those endless loads of laundry, all those breakfasts to prepare. And maybe the question of why men don’t do more was best answered by a male guest at a dinner party thrown by O’Reilly in the time preceding her article’s publication. “I’ll go along with some of it, equal pay for equal work, that seems fair enough. . . . [But] you can’t tell me Women’s Lib means I have to wash dishes, does it?”8
“It’s structural,” State University of New York sociologist Veronica Tichenor, who specializes in division of labor in families, told me over the phone. “Work hasn’t changed. Workplaces still act like everyone has a wife at home. Everyone should be the ideal worker and not have to leave to take care of a sick kid. If one family struggles to balance it all, it’s a personal problem. All these families with the same problem? That’s a social issue.” Certainly Tichenor has a point, as do the authors of the articles and books that explicate the problems in our system that make twenty-first-century family well-being difficult to sustain: from the near-twenty-four-hour demands of many occupations, to the implicit disapproval (or downright job-threatening consequences) faced by workers who put family obligations first, to the stultifying dearth of institutional supports for caretakers in the United States (and some other Western nations plagued with the problem). Men don’t do more because the world has made it difficult for them to do so. “The structure of work needs to change,” Tichenor emphasized. But if better arrangements in women’s personal lives can be achieved only through sweeping shifts in our political and economic ones, I am not, at the time of this book’s writing, optimistic for my daughters, nor for theirs.
The most recent time-use diary information collected by Pew Research and the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the U.S. consistently finds that women who work outside of the home shoulder 65 percent of child care responsibilities, and their male partners 35 percent.9 Those percentages have held steady since the year 2000.10 In the last twenty years, that figure has not budged. Some academics and parents alike detail anecdotes of more egalitarian setups, and of course there are exceptions to the rule. But the plural of anecdote is not data, and no one disputes the empirical work demonstrating that women, despite their ever-increasing economic power, are still living somewhat disempowered lives at home.
Ohio State sociologist Claire Kamp Dush even suggested to me that the household time-use studies—which look at men and women overall rather than husbands compared with their own wives—actually present an overly sunny take on progress. “I question what we know from time-use diaries. Our pattern of results, looking at couples on the same day, is different. It shows that men do even less.” That’s a grim reality for the generations of women who failed to anticipate such an impasse.
Expecting male partners who would share, we’ve been left with what political scientists call unfulfilled, rising expectations. Historically, these expectations lie at the heart of revolutions, insurgencies, and civil unrest. If so many couples are living this way, and so many women are angered or just exhausted by it, why do we remain so stuck? Where is our revolution, our insurgency, our civil unrest?
As I spoke with mothers and experts, they landed on three broad explanatory categories for the problem’s tenacity: biology, cultural mandates around maternal devotion, and the ubiquitous prioritization of men’s needs and desires relative to women’s. I set out to look at each. Is there something inborn that keeps mothers, post-weaning, from lightening their load, or fathers from picking up slack? Are societal demands for hyperinvolved mothering so salient that even those of us who don’t consciously subscribe to that ideal become destined to live it out, leaving our spouses behind in our wake? Are men so blindly entitled to the passive subordination of women that change is improbable at best?
I set out to interview a hundred mothers (I began with the friends and acquaintances of friends and acquaintances but ultimately relied primarily on mothers’ groups on Facebook to recruit subjects). Once I got to about forty women, I began to see that the interviews were amazingly similar. No matter the age, race, region, or socioeconomic status of the woman (and my subjects ran the gamut), they largely had one story to recount. I wondered if this was an artifact of the limits of my journalistic skill.
I was relieved when the author Cheryl Strayed detailed a similar experience. For her Dear Sugar advice column, Strayed solicited letters from women about division of labor on her social media accounts. She noted an overwhelming response, and also that “Most of the letters could’ve been written by the same person—all of them women who described . . . a ‘great guy’ partner who doesn’t do his equal share of the domestic and organization tasks required to run a household. . . .”11 I stopped at fifty mothers.
Sociologists Toni Calasanti and Carol Bailey have argued that “focusing on the persistence of the gender difference in the division of domestic labor rather than on factors accounting for the small amount of change may be more fruitful for understanding and eradicating inequality.”12 The more we know about this trenchant norm, the better position we’re in to combat it. As third-wave-feminist writer Amy Richards has acknowledged, “Feminism’s crusade remains unfinished because examining the ‘personal’ is far more threatening than condemning the political.”13 This book is ultimately a close inspection of the personal.