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LINK Stop Calling Women Nags — How Emotional Labor is Dragging Down Gender Equality

Emotional labor is the unpaid job men still don't understand.

BY GEMMA HARTLEY
SEP 27, 2017

For Mother's Day I asked for one thing: a house cleaning service. Bathrooms and floors specifically, windows if the extra expense was reasonable. The gift, for me, was not so much in the cleaning itself but the fact that for once I would not be in charge of the household office work. I would not have to make the calls, get multiple quotes, research and vet each service, arrange payment and schedule the appointment. The real gift I wanted was to be relieved of the emotional labor of a single task that had been nagging at the back of my mind. The clean house would simply be a bonus.

My husband waited for me to change my mind to an "easier" gift than housecleaning, something he could one-click order on Amazon. Disappointed by my unwavering desire, the day before Mother's Day he called a single service, decided they were too expensive, and vowed to clean the bathrooms himself. He still gave me the choice, of course. He told me the high dollar amount of completing the cleaning services I requested (since I control the budget) and asked incredulously if I still wanted him to book it.

What I wanted was for him to ask friends on Facebook for a recommendation, call four or five more services, do the emotional labor I would have done if the job had fallen to me. I had wanted to hire out deep cleaning for a while, especially since my freelance work had picked up considerably. The reason I hadn’t done it yet was part guilt over not doing my housework, and an even larger part of not wanting to deal with the work of hiring a service. I knew exactly how exhausting it was going to be. That’s why I asked my husband to do it as a gift.

According to Dr. Michele Ramsey, Associate Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences at Penn State Berks, emotional labor is often conflated with problem solving. “The gendered assumption is that ‘men are the problem solvers because women are too emotional,’" she explains. "But who is really solving the bulk of the world's problems at home and in the office?” As the household manager for my husband and three kids, I’m fairly certain I know the answer. I was gifted a necklace for Mother's Day while my husband stole away to deep clean the bathrooms, leaving me to care for our children as the rest of the house fell into total disarray.

In his mind, he was doing the thing I had most wanted—giving me sparkling bathrooms without having to do it myself. Which is why he was frustrated when I ungratefully passed by, not looking at his handiwork as I put away his shoes, shirt and socks that had been left on the floor. I stumbled over the box of gift wrap he had pulled off a high shelf two days earlier and left in the center of our closet. In order to put it back, I had to get a kitchen chair and drag it into our closet so I could reach the shelf where it belonged.

“All you have to do is ask me to put it back,” he said, watching me struggle.

It was obvious that the box was in the way, that it needed to be put back. It would have been easy for him to just reach up and put it away, but instead he had stepped around it, willfully ignoring it for two days. It was up to me to tell him that he should put away something he got out in the first place.

“That’s the point,” I said, now in tears, “I don’t want to have to ask.”

The crying, the snapping at him—it all required damage control. I had to tell him how much I appreciated the bathroom cleaning, but perhaps he could do it another time (like when our kids were in bed). Then I tried to gingerly explain the concept of emotional labor: that I was the manager of the household, and that being manager was a lot of thankless work. Delegating work to other people, i.e. telling him to do something he should instinctively know to do, is exhausting. I tried to tell him that I noticed the box at least 20 times over the past two days. He had noticed it only when I was heaving it onto the top shelf instead of asking for help. The whole explanation took a lot of restraint.

Walking that fine line to keep the peace and not upset your partner is something women are taught to accept as their duty from an early age. “In general, we gender emotions in our society by continuing to reinforce the false idea that women are always, naturally and biologically able to feel, express, and manage our emotions better than men,” says Dr. Lisa Huebner, a sociologist of gender, who both publishes and teaches on the subject of emotional labor at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. “This is not to say that some individuals do not manage emotion better than others as part of their own individual personality, but I would argue that we still have no firm evidence that this ability is biologically determined by sex. At the same time (and I would argue because it is not a natural difference) we find all kinds of ways in society to ensure that girls and women are responsible for emotions and, then, men get a pass.”

My husband is a good man, and a good feminist ally. I could tell, as I walked him through it, that he was trying to grasp what I was getting at. But he didn’t. He said he’d try to do more cleaning around the house to help me out. He restated that all I ever needed to do was ask him for help, but therein lies the problem. I don't want to micromanage housework. I want a partner with equal initiative.

However, it’s not as easy as telling him that. My husband, despite his good nature and admirable intentions, still responds to criticism in a very patriarchal way. Forcing him to see emotional labor for the work it is feels like a personal attack on his character. If I were to point out random emotional labor duties I carry out—reminding him of his family’s birthdays, carrying in my head the entire school handbook and dietary guidelines for lunches, updating the calendar to include everyone’s schedules, asking his mother to babysit the kids when we go out, keeping track of what food and household items we are running low on, tidying everyone’s strewn about belongings, the unending hell that is laundry—he would take it as me saying, “Look at everything I’m doing that you’re not. You’re a bad person for ignoring me and not pulling your weight.”

Bearing the brunt of all this emotional labor in a household is frustrating. It’s the word I hear most commonly when talking to friends about the subject of all the behind-the-scenes work they do. It’s frustrating to be saddled with all of these responsibilities, no one to acknowledge the work you are doing, and no way to change it without a major confrontation.

“What bothers me the most about having any conversation around emotional labor is being seen as a nag,” says Kelly Burch, a freelance journalist who works primarily from home. “My partner feels irritated and defensive by the fact that I'm always pointing out what he's not doing. It shuts him down. I understand why it would be frustrating from his perspective, but I haven't figured out another way to make him aware of all the emotional and mental energy I'm spending to keep the house running.”

Even having a conversation about the imbalance of emotional labor becomes emotional labor. It gets to a point where I have to weigh the benefits of getting my husband to understand my frustration against the compounded emotional labor of doing so in a way that won’t end in us fighting. Usually I let it slide, reminding myself that I’m lucky to have a partner who willingly complies to any task I decide to assign to him. I know compared to many women, including female family members and friends, I have it so easy. My husband does a lot. He does dishes every night habitually. He often makes dinner. He will handle bedtime for the kids when I am working. If I ask him to take on extra chores, he will, without complaint. It feels greedy, at times, to want more from him.

Yet I find myself worrying about how the mental load bore almost exclusively by women translates into a deep gender inequality that is hard to shake on the personal level. It is difficult to model an egalitarian household for my children when it is clear that I am the household manager, tasked with delegating any and all household responsibilities, or taking on the full load myself. I can feel my sons and daughter watching our dynamic all the time, gleaning the roles for themselves as they grow older.
. When I brush my daughter’s hair and elaborately braid it round the side of her scalp, I am doing the thing that is expected of me. When my husband brushes out tangles before bedtime, he needs his efforts noticed and congratulated—saying aloud in front of both me and her that it took him a whole 15 minutes. There are many small examples of where the work I normally do must be lauded when transferred to my husband. It seems like a small annoyance, but its significance looms larger.

My son will boast of his clean room and any other jobs he has done; my daughter will quietly put her clothes in the hamper and get dressed each day without being asked. They are six and four respectively. Unless I engage in this conversation on emotional labor and actively change the roles we inhabit, our children will do the same. They are already following in our footsteps; we are leading them toward the same imbalance.

“Children learn their communication patterns and gender roles (kids can recognize 'proper' gender behavior by age three) from a variety of people and institutions, but their parents are the ones that they, in theory, interact with the most,” notes Dr. Ramsey. So if we want to change the expectations of emotional labor for the next generation, it has to start at home. “For parents, this means making sure that one spouse does not do more of that type of labor than the other. Speaking in terms of how emotional labor is currently divided, girls will hopefully learn not to expect to have to do that labor and boys will hopefully learn not to expect females to do that labor for them. Children watching parents share that emotional labor will be more likely to be children who expect that labor to be shared in their own lives.”

I know it’s not going to be easy for either of us to tackle the splitting of emotional labor, nor do I ever expect it to be completely equitable. (I’ll admit that I probably enjoy certain types of emotional labor far more than my husband, like planning our meals and vacations.) I’m also more skilled at emotional labor on the whole because I’ve had my entire life to practice it. But if we’re lucky, he’s got a whole lot of life left to hone his emotional labor skills, and to change the course of our children’s future. Our sons can still learn to carry their own weight. Our daughter can learn to not carry others'.

HippieChick58 9 Jan 1
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15 comments

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0

Well I gotta say....sounds oh so true. I saw this behavior on the jobsite as well. Yes it is Emotional Labor and yes it does drag you down. It's basically someone doing the bare minumum and usually with a shitty attitude.
I have not lived in enough other people's houses to comment much more than that.

My 2nd wife would not have any part of me helping as I was an incompetent idiot. She clearly drew a line as to what her territory was. Okay. I've been taking care of myself for over 20 years, before I met you. You just want me out of your way. Okay. What do I know......
Whatever pleases you darling.
Turns out nothing did please her.

So now I'm doing all of the house stuff with 1-2 boys. And yes it gets old. Clean, dishes, laundry, groceries....wash, rinse, repeat. They will help, not stupid helpless help even. But they rarely take the initiative.

Kind of like the fellas on the jobsite.....

twill Level 7 Jan 9, 2022
1

I would be frantically trying to clean the house for company coming the next day. I would be clearly exhausted and stressed, and yet I'd still have to follow him through the house picking up tools he'd leave lying around, preparing his meals, and doing his laundry. If I complained about the workload I was handling on my own, I'd hear, "Well, just tell me what you want me to do!" in an exasperated voice. Good grief, man, are you blind? Stop making messes would be a good start. Perhaps getting dinner for us, for once? Grab your four pairs of shoes you left in every room and take them to the closet? Perhaps make it so that just cleaning up after your toddler ass isn't easier than trying to get you to do your share?

Deb57 Level 8 Jan 6, 2022

Something I saw recently.

If a man says he will do something he will do it.
You don't have to keep nagging him about it every six months.

2

Yes many men have an issue with taking responsibility around the house. I have also known many women that were slobs around the house. I was fortunate to have a husband that shared the workload required to maintain a home. We did distribute the workload in traditional ways. For example,I never changed the oil in the car or replaced the lawn mower blades. I routinely did the majority of the in-house work but he was adept at clearing the table as well as picking up after himself. He also ironed his jeans and put up his own laundry. After the kids moved out he started vacuuming and doing all kinds of housework because he thought when the kids were there they were supposed to help me.

I tend to wait on everyone probably because that's the way I was brought up. I don't think about it I just do it. My husband always brought me a cup of coffee in the morning though because I mentioned it just once that it would be nice for him to bring me a cup of coffee in the morning. After I noticed the trail of coffee drips on the floor I finally talked him out of that kindness.

I know I was lucky but I also know that gender roles are changing and I know several young couples that have much more equal marriages.

I'd bring you a cup of coffee in the morning.

4

Good article. "Feminism isn't about letting women play the game, it's about changing the rules." And while the Evangelical right is proud to support "women should take care of the home," millennia of that being the default has ingrained it into our culture so that even those who intellectually reject it can still be blinded by their upbringing. Privilege is hard to see when you're the one who benefits from it.

2

This is why I refuse to live with a man again. A widower, 70, who never learned to cook wants to meet me. His wife waited on him for 47 years. "I can come over for dinner every night," he said. What lazy, sexist user.

"I can help in the kitchen," he said. How can he help if he doesn't notice what needs to be done? Since he has no idea how to chop vegetables or cook?

"How do you cut a lemon?" an attorney said when I asked him to cut lemon wedges.

"I would be a great sous chef," guys who never learned to cook say. Instead they sat waiting for me to put a filled plate in front of them. I refused to see them again.

I never worked so hard in my life as when I was married! My husband dumped on me all of the house cleaning, yard work (36 rose bushes), snow shoveling, and raking millions of leaves from our huge Norway Maple. It was the last tree to drop its leaves. I raked leaves in swirling snow.

"My back!" Terry whined. Yet he coached and played tennis six days a week.

My sons and cook for ourselves, I taught them that we contribute to who ever we are with

I have a maple like that. 😟

Maybe he could help in the kitchen by pulling out a smartphone and ordering good takeout from Uber or another app.
Not pizza chain please.

2

“Brevity is the soul of wit”

-Billy Shakesman

6

and friends wonder why I'm single....It's entirely too peaceful to give up

I can identify with that response...

4

There is no doubt that emotional labor drags down anyone.

3

Well written. This just described my marriage. lol.

3

Totally agree

8

This is why I have discovered I love being single.
I don't want to have to ask someone to do what should be obvious such as cleaning up after themselves. |
Then if you ask twice you are nagging.
If you lose your temper you're being a bitch.
The implied thing is that you should just clean up after them and be a servant, as is your place in life.
fuck that shit. sideways

2

Neither men or women can read minds. As such asking is not a core but something that should be expected.

You need to be asked not to leave your clothes on the floor or to put something back that you took out.

Why is that?

@BufftonBeotch Who, other than you, thinks that is what I was referring to? Are you always this moronic?

@Alienbeing And straight to the personal insult.

Anyone surprised?

@BufftonBeotch Your return comment clearly shows you were caught. You said nothing. Additionally an insult is not something that is correct and my initial post was correct. If you don't like it try beibg more meaningful.

@BufftonBeotch not surprised at all. Also not surprised to see that he missed the entire point of the article.

@Deb57 I thought it was funny that he proved the validity of the article with his response to it and reply to me.

@Deb57 What is surprising is that you and others missed the point. Preconceived ideas preclude good reading.

@Alienbeing, our lived experiences trump your erroneous opinions. It surprises nobody that this truth is beyond your ability to grok.

@Deb57 Of course you, or no one else provided any "lived experiences" so no one knows what you refer to, or maybe your experiences don't even exist.

@Alienbeing wow, you are a marvel! You have proven you haven't read all the comments on this post. Incidentally, calling you out for being wrong does not obligate me to provide "lived experiences," but I did share some, all the same. Open your creepy eyes and look around.

@Deb57 WOW you are thick! My comment referred to a reply. Period. The fact that you can't figure that out is YOUR problem.

Last, if you think anyone knows your "lived experiences" you are wrong. I have no clue what you mean, I don't know you , don't know your associates, your education or anythng about you. Why would you assume I, or anyone knows your "lived experiences?

@Alienbeing how about because I related some of them in this thread? It seems that you calling me "thick" is simply projection.

@Deb57 What is thick is your failure to recognize that you are arguing with yourself, not my initial reply to Buffton. You may continue to argue with yourself, let me know who wins.

@Alienbeing the difference here is that I am actually staying on topic and making sense, and you're just being nasty and insulting. I think that, by this time, you have left no mystery as to your true character. I pity you.

@Deb57 No, the difference is you are unable to grasp the fact that you missed my point entirely. Continue to argue woth yourself I could not care less.

1

This isn't just a woman's issue

Tejas Level 8 Jan 2, 2022
1

Doesn't this come down to the time honored practice of victim blaming when the victims of inequality complain about the inequity? And I can see their point. When a whole gender is pretty much raised and socialized to practice inequality in the household duties, then it doesn't do much good to advise the woman to just "find another, better man" to share those duties with in the next relationship. And the only other alternatives are to either not have kids or raise them as a single parent, which means even more household overload for the mom.

1

Well in her own words she says he’s a good man, and a feminists ally. Sure seems like it would be easy enough to ask him to put the wrap back on the shelf.....
I reckon this is why I’m single though!? 🤔

Why does she have to tell him? He got it down, why didn't he put it away when he was done. He is a fully grown adult, surely he can pick up after himself, AND the kidlets as needed. How is it that some men don't see that things aren't put away?

So men are all still preschool ability.
Is that what you are admitting?
Now little Bucky what do all the good boys do when they are done playing with the toy?

Well, it's not all that easy to ask a man to do anything when he is so obtuse that he won't even clean up after himself unprompted. And why is it okay for him to be such a prick but not okay for her to object to him being such a prick?

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