
Home > Marriage > Emotions
 Marriage Partnership, Winter 1998
My Job's Bigger than Your Job
How to keep competition from creeping into your home
life
by Alicia Howe
"Boy, am I tired."
"Me, too."
"I thought my workday would never end. It seemed like every phone call
and every memo just dumped another problem on my desk."
"I know what you mean. I must have dealt with 25 angry customers since
lunch."
"At least you don't have productivity quotas to meet. You have no idea
what a headache those are."
"No, I just have to figure out ways to keep the customers happy without
giving away all the company's profits. No pressure there."
"Talk about pressure! Jean called in sick today, and she was supposed
to do the month-end reports, so I had to do them."
"That's nothing. We just found out there's going to be a special inventory
review starting next week. Do you know what it's like to get ready for
that?"
"It's not anything like trying to meet productivity quotas and do the
month-end reports at the same time; I'm pretty sure of that. I'm exhausted.
What are we doing about dinner?"
"Don't look at me! I'm too tired to fix anything."
"So am I. Guess I'm not all that hungry anyway."
"I'm going to the gym."
"I'm going to walk the dog."
Does this conversation sound like:
-
two contestants battling it out for the title of Hardest Working Person in
the House?
-
spouses who both desperately need each other to recognize their efforts?
-
a couple who are both feeling overwhelmed by the combined demands of work
and home?
It's all of the above, of course. At the end of the day, when workplace
frustrations are still fresh in their minds and the evening's domestic tasks
are looming, the setting is ripe for The Contest to beginor to resume where
it left off on a previous night. If one spouse begins describing how hard
he or she worked today, the other spouse may feel a need to balance the scales
with a similar recital in order not to feel lacking in industriousness or
worth. If allowed to go on very long, this unhealthy competition can cause
hurt feelings, growing anger and festering resentments that may take years
to repair.
My husband, Dan, and I fell right into this trap about ten years into our
marriage. Our child was in school, our careers had progressed and both of
us were in high-intensity jobs in which we were trying furiously to prove
ourselves. At the same time, we were struggling to keep up with chores around
the house in the face of these daunting new work responsibilities. Our
competitive conversations became so frequentand so predictablethat if
one of us uttered the words "I'm tired," the other automatically tuned out,
knowing another salvo in The Contest was about to begin.
Why does this pattern arise in so many marriages? Blame it on good old human
nature. All of us have a fundamental need for recognition. Of all the people
in our lives, our spouse is the one whose appreciation we most need. We need
our mate to respect what we do and to value our effortsfrom folding the
laundry to earning a promotion. If we don't receive the recognition we need
and want, we start devising strategies to evoke it. Unfortunately, these
attempts often come across as trying to make ourselves appear harder-working
or more put-upon than our spousenot at all the result we wanted.
One or both spouses may also have fears about their own competence, either
within or outside the home. The Contest started in our home at a time when
Dan and I were both feeling insecure about being able to measure up at work.
That insecurity undoubtedly multiplied our need for each other's recognition
and escalated the competition.
Some spouses may feel inadequate at domestic tasks, too. A husband who feels
lost in the kitchen or inept at parenting may feel a need to let his wife
know how hard he worked at his job all day. That way, she won't expect him
to come up with an imaginative dinner or get a wriggling, cranky toddler
bathed and into bed.

Many couples unwittingly enter
into a form of competition about
who works the hardest, whether
outside or inside the home.

Cultural and societal norms also feed the scenario. Studies continue to show
that even among couples who say they divide tasks equally, in reality that's
not the case. As a society, we still delegate domestic tasks primarily to
wives and breadwinning tasks mainly to husbands, regardless of which spouse
is actually the chief breadwinner. This pattern has persisted even with the
entry of unprecedented numbers of women into the workplace.
With all these factors creating a fertile field for The Contest, how can
couples put an end to it before it damages the very foundation of their
marriages? A few guidelines may help.
Be alert and responsive to pleas
for encouragement
If your spouse expresses frustration with preparing the month-end reports
or enduring a co-worker's inefficiency, try not to counter with one-upmanship:
"Well, at my job .
" What your spouse may need most is assurance that he
or she can handle the challenge: "I can see how overwhelming that must seem,
but you always come through under pressure." Maybe you can cite a specific
instance in which your spouse succeeded at a difficult assignment.
Express appreciation
often
A friend of mine says marriages would work better if we all envisioned our
spouses wearing huge signs that say "Appreciate me." Remember to praise his
or her efforts, whether at home or at the office. "You finished the month-end
reportslet's celebrate!" "Thanks so much for putting the laundry away.
It just seemed to take more energy that I had tonight." "Ah, beef stew. How
did you know comfort food was just what I needed?" The fact that our society
assigns certain roles to each gender doesn't give us permission to take them
for granted. For a wife who comes home from her "day job" and immediately
takes charge of the household, a word of acknowledgment and recognition from
her husband will mean a great deal, even if she believes that those domestic
responsibilities are rightly hers. Similarly, a husband who takes seriously
his role as breadwinner and works hard to succeed likes to know that his
efforts are valued by his spouse.
Reinforce your spouse's efforts
to help
Without meaning to, we defeat our spouses' good intentions when we criticize
the way they do things, like sorting the laundry or dressing the baby or
mowing the yard. Picking apart the way a spouse does a task is a virtual
guarantee he or she won't do it again. And re-doing a task the "right" way
after a spouse has done it hurts just as much as saying out loud, "You did
it wrong," because the message being sent is exactly the same.
If we want our spouses to share household chores, praise and appreciation
will achieve that goal. Criticism and nit-picking will have the opposite
effect. My son went to pre-school in some pretty outlandish outfitsbut
it was a small price to pay for the help of having my husband dress him.
In fact, Dan and I put an end to The Contest when we finally realized just
how counterproductivenot to mention annoyingit really was. We decided
on a three-pronged agreement: we'd be fully respectful of each other's work
demands, recognizing that even though our jobs were different, they were
both difficult; we'd be sensitive enough and flexible enough to lighten each
other's load by helping out with tasks whether or not it was "my job" or
"my turn"; and we'd outlaw the sentence "I'm tired" at the end of the workday.
We were both tired of hearing it!
And neither of us was sorry to see The Contest end.
After 25 years together, Alicia Howe and her husband no longer compete
over who works the hardest. Special thanks to licensed clinical psychologist
Candice Frankovelgia, Psy.D., of Colorado Springs, Colorado, who contributed
generously of her expertise and insights in the preparation of this
article.
Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Winter 1998, Vol. 15, No. 4, Page 62
Marriage Partnership
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