Who does what around the house?

By By Leada Gore, Editor
The statistics tell the story: In a poll of men and women, 74 percent of men said they believed household chores were shared equally.
In the same poll, 51 percent of women said they felt the same way. Twenty-six percent of men said one person did all the housework; 49 percent of women said household responsibilities fell to just one person.
Quite a difference isn’t there?
This could mean one of two things: Either women are housecleaning martyrs who feel they have to do it all themselves or men just aren’t doing their share.
So, which is it?
To help shed some light on the subject, let me offer you a glimpse into a typical American household.
The subjects were a man and a wife, both with full-time jobs and joint responsibilities for a 2-year-old bundle of energy. They have one dog, one fish and a cat that shows up every now and then. There’s laundry to do, dishes to get washed, food to purchase and dinner to cook – typical household things.
The conversation takes place during the rush to get ready for Sunday morning church services.
Man opens drawer and says “I don’t have any (socks, underwear, shirts…fill in the blank.) Do you know where they are?”
Wife replies, “No, I don’t since I don’t wear your (socks, underwear, shirts). They must be in the laundry room to be washed.”
Husband leaves, acting slightly huffy that said items aren’t clean and folded neatly in his drawer.
He returns.
The wife replies, “Sounds good to me. And, while you’re at it, you could go do some laundry and then you would have some clean (socks, underwear, shirts.”
Wife smiles sweetly. Husband leaves to go wash his own (socks, underwear, shirts) or at least walk in that direction to make the wife think he’s going to do so.
In the end, the wife went into the laundry room found the (socks, underwear, shirts) still dirty in the hamper. She mutters to herself and then does a load of laundry.
And, just to get her point across, she washes everything in hot water and hopes the (socks, underwear, shirts) all shrink.

Falkville

Larry Madison has been a pillar in Falkville for four decades

Hartselle

Hartselle trio nominated for two K-LOVE awards

Hartselle

Hartselle students chosen to attend Girls State

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle Kiwanis Club continues scholarly legacy with annual golf tournament

Editor's picks

Heartbreaking finish: Hartselle comes up a run short in state baseball finals

Decatur

Fallen Morgan County officers remembered, families honored  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle drops Game 1 to Hillcrest, needs two wins for state title

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Despite title loss, Hartselle thankful for state experience 

Editor's picks

Hartselle baseball legend dies

Breaking News

Hartselle baseball legend William Booth dies at 79

At a Glance

ALDOT patching area of Thompson Road tomorrow, Thursday

At a Glance

Spring-time market day in Hartselle scheduled for May 18 

Hartselle

New Crestline Elementary School welcomes students

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle industry closing, affecting more than 150 jobs  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Habitat for Humanity applications for homeownership available June 3 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

State seeking death penalty for Fort Payne woman accused of pushing victim off cliff

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Pilot of ultralight dies in Hartselle plane crash

Editor's picks

Northern lights visible from north Alabama

Hartselle

Hartselle students to attend Boys State

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

High scorers: 42 Hartselle students a part of ACT 30 plus club

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle projects budget surplus based on midyear numbers 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Planned Hartselle library already piquing interest 

Brewer

Students use practical life skills at Morgan County 4-H competition

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

After 13 years underground, the cicadas are coming 

x