The Guinea Pig Diaries (22 page)

Read The Guinea Pig Diaries Online

Authors: A. J. Jacobs

“No making fun of my family.

“No complaining about having to go to D.C. to visit Henry and Jennifer every year.

“If I ask a simple question like ’Is the drugstore open on Sundays?’ and you don’t know the answer, try saying ’I don’t know.’ Do not say ’It’s a mystery that humans have been pondering for centuries, but scientists and philosophers are no closer to an answer.’ ”

Fair enough. I can see how that might get old.

“Go to sleep at a decent hour so you’re not a zombie in the morning.

“Be more knowledgeable about our finances.

“No hovering over my shoulder and reading my
US Weekly
and then claiming you’re not interested in that stuff.

“No putting things back in the fridge when there’s just a teensy, tiny bit left.”

“Wait a second,” I say. “You just said, ’Don’t waste food.’ I’m getting mixed messages here.”

“It’s a fine line, but I think you can figure it out.”

It went on and on, this list. What’s happening here? Has the power already gone to her head? Or am I unusually difficult to live with?

I must have looked like I just got beaned by an Olympic shot put to the forehead, because Julie softened.

“I love you,” she says.

“Noted,” I say.

THE FIRST DAY

“Good morning, honey! You look terrific!”

I’m really playing it up.

“Thanks, sweetie!” She’s playing right back to me.

Soon after, she assigns me my first chore.

“Can you think of a third gift we can give your father for his birthday?”

Three gifts? That was my initial reaction. My reflex was to make some lame remark, like “Three gifts? Two aren’t enough? What, was he born in a manger?” Instead I said, “Sure.”

This is something I notice throughout the day. Whenever Julie says something, my default setting is to argue with her. It’s (usually) not overtly hostile bickering. It’s just affectionate parrying. Verbal jujitsu.

But at the same time, I know it’s not good. You playfully bicker enough, and after a few years, it stops becoming playful. Am I on the way to becoming the short, bald guy from the Lock-horns?

I’ve got to reboot my brain. I’ve got to stop seeing conversation as a series of offensive and defensive moves. Marriage isn’t a zero-sum game. It doesn’t have to be boxing. Maybe it can be two people with badminton racquets trying to keep the birdie in the air.

I spend the day trying to suppress my me-first instincts. Every decision, I ask: What would Julie want? I start to cut the cantaloupe for my sons’ breakfast, and stop. Julie once complained that I cut cantaloupes all jagged, like a graph of the
NASDAQ. I couldn’t care less, but it matters to her. So, a sharper knife and a smooth and straight cut.

Frankly, it’s exhausting to check with my inner Julie every twenty seconds.

“You liking this?” I ask.

“Loving it. And it’s great for our marriage. Right?”

“Right!”

The apartment’s chilly, so Julie slides her hands under my shirt to warm them up. One of my least favorite of her habits. Two Popsicles on my stomach. I bite my tongue.

HENPECKING THROUGH HISTORY

If I’d tried this experiment a couple of hundred years ago, I’d be breaking the law.

Stephanie Coontz writes in her great book
Marriage, a History,
that if the wife wore the pants in a family, the husband wasn’t just an object of contempt—he was a criminal. “A husband could be fined or ducked in the village pond for not controlling his wife.” In Colonial America, men sometimes “sued for slander if neighbors gossiped that a husband was allowing his wife to usurp his authority.”

In the Middle Ages, rural villages had a charming ritual called charivaris for those who didn’t discipline their wives: “A henpecked man might be strapped to a cart or ridden around backward on a mule, to be booed and ridiculed for his inversion of the accepted marital hierarchy.”

Coontz makes clear what I already suspected: For most of history, marriage was wildly undemocratic. Husband and wife were like czar and peasant, chairman of the board and receptionist.

In fact, wifely obedience was pretty much synonymous with
marriage. Confucius defined a wife as “one who submits to another.” Coontz writes that ancient Romans opposed gay marriage not because of homosexuality, which they had no problem with, but because “no real man would ever agree to play the subordinate role demanded of a Roman wife.”

Throughout most of history, I’d be seen as a traitor to my gender. I should instead learn some marital tips from, say, Scottish poet Robert Burns. In his 1788 poem “The Henpecked Husband,” he writes:

Curs’d be the man, the poorest wretch in life,
The crouching vassal to a tyrant wife!
Who has no will but by her high permission,
Who has not sixpence but in her possession;
Who must to he, his dear friend’s secrets tell,
Who dreads a curtain lecture worse than hell.
Were such the wife had fallen to my part,
I’d break her spirit or I’d break her heart;
I’d charm her with the magic of a switch,
I’d kiss her maids, and kick the perverse bitch.

Lovely, right?

I call Coontz to see if she knows of any cultures—past or present—in which women reigned supreme. The short answer: no. There’s never been a true matriarchal society, not counting the legendary single-nippled Amazons. There have been matrilineal societies—in southern India, among Native Americans in New Jersey—where descent is traced through the woman. Coontz is partial to such societies, but they are very rare. “Matrilineal societies tend to be more peaceful and inclusive,” she says.

I tell Julie about my research and read her the Robert Burns poem.

“See? You’re very lucky you weren’t Robert Burns’s wife.”

“Yes. Very lucky. But you’re not allowed to do that this month.”

“What?”

“Compare yourself to other husbands.”

It’s true. I’m a shameless comparer. It’s a reflex born of insecurity. Any time I hear about a husband behaving badly, I can hardly wait to tell Julie. See? You’re lucky I don’t have affairs with my coworkers. See? You’re lucky I don’t work till eleven every night. See? You’re lucky I don’t lock our kids in the basement and create a second secret family like that Austrian guy.

Julie put such comparisons on her thou-shalt-not list, though she sometimes breaks the rule herself. Last week, she sent me an e-mail that said “YOU are lucky” followed by the Fox News headline
WOMAN SHOOTS BOYFRIEND FOR NOT LETTING HER SLEEP.
Julie, you might have guessed, loves her sleep.

IT IS BETTER TO GIVE

One of Julie’s guidelines for Project Ideal Husband is, naturally, for me to buy her flowers. I object that we’re in the middle of a fierce recession (I know—not very obedient of me). Flowers in New York are so astonishingly expensive, I can only surmise that they are kept hydrated with water drawn from the fjords of Norway by specially trained geologists.

“It doesn’t have to be flowers,” Julie says. “Gifts of any kind will do.”

When we started dating, I was a decent gift giver. I gave Julie books and soaps and cinnamon-scented candles. Then the presents
slowly trailed off. Maybe my gift-giving deficiency is genetic. My dad is still living down the gift he gave my mom for their first Valentine’s together: nothing.

The reasoning: If he got my mom something fancy, and then one year down the road, he forgot to get her anything, she’d think he loved her less. He didn’t want her to think that. So the best way to prevent that situation was not to get her anything at all.

Which is actually quite rational, in its own way.

Going against family tradition, I’ve started to bring Julie a gift a day. Mostly, no-foam lattes. But also DVDs and soaps and books.

I’m starting to plan these gifts days in advance. I look forward to seeing Julie’s smile when I set them on her desk. I haven’t gotten any jumping for joy again, but she did rub her hands with glee when I gave her the autobiography of Maureen McCormick, who played Marcia Brady before descending into cocaine addiction (Julie’s a fan of the Bradys
and
addiction memoirs).

The Bible’s “it’s better to give than receive” was not the raving of a lunatic. It goes back to a recurring theme I’ve found in almost all my experiments: behavior shapes your thoughts.

My brain sees me giving a gift to Julie.

My brain concludes I must really love her.

I love her all the more. Which means I’m happier in my relationship, if a bit poorer.

MR. MOM, THE SEQUEL

I rented
Mr. Mom
the other day, the early 1980s movie. It’s the one with Michael Keaton getting fired and having to stay at home with the kids (best line from Keaton: “I’m a regular Phil Donahue!”). Every joke has the exact same premise: man attempts
to use household appliance, household appliance goes berserk and sends off sparks. The domicile is a foreign and scary land to the 1983 male.

But things must be better in our enlightened twenty-first century, right? Actually, no. According to a recent
New York Times Magazine
cover story, women on average still do twice as much housework as men, about 31 hours to 14 hours. And here’s the strange part: that ratio holds mostly true
even if both spouses have full-time jobs.
Even worse for women is the child-care ratio. Moms do an average of five times as much with the kids as dads. (Working moms do a measly 3.7 times as much.) This is the same ratio as ninety years ago.

It wasn’t always this way. Once upon a time, housecleaning was seen as macho. Or at least it wasn’t unmanly. Back in the Middle Ages, when the husband and wife both worked at home making candles and barrels and whatnot, “domesticity was a virtue shared by males and females, a shorthand term for thrift, hard work and order,” writes Coontz. Then in the Industrial Revolution, men went to work outside the home, and “domesticity tumbled out of the constellation of masculine virtues.” Women’s work became devalued, “seen as an act of love, rather than a contribution to survival.”

If we’re looking at it with cold Spock-like rationality, then, as the
Times
says, “gender should not determine the division of labor” in the home.

I’d always figured I was a regular Phil Donahue. I did my fair share of housework—or at least more than the average guy. But just to make sure, I asked Julie to list all the household chores she does.

“I clean up the kids’ rooms. I set up playdates for our kids. I take them to doctor’s appointments. I pay the bills. I get the baby gifts for my friends . . .”

If this were a movie, it would show clock hands spinning around, maybe calendar days flipping by. What I’m saying is, it’s a long freakin’ list.

“I fill the liquid soap dispensers. I wash our placemats. I get new toner for the printer.”

Julie paused. “This exercise may cause a lot of trouble for you.”

I was thinking the same thing. She does chores I didn’t even know existed.

“I’ll do everything in the house for the month,” I said.

“I can’t let you do that,” she says. Our apartment would look like Grey Gardens within two weeks.

The
Times Magazine
talked about something called Equal Parenting, also known as Peer Marriage or Symmetrical Marriage. It’s a movement started by a feminist writer named Alix Kates Shulman in 1969, who drew up a famous twenty-two-point Marriage Agreement that split the duties (“Nighttime: Husband does Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. Wife does Monday, Wednesday and Saturday . . . wife strips beds, husband remakes them.”). Shulman and her husband later got divorced.

But our marriage can handle it, right? Just give me a bunch of tasks and I’ll check them off.

The next morning, Julie says, “Okay, call the pediatrician and schedule Zane’s—you know what? I’ll just do it. It’s faster.”

This is the problem. Julie’s just more competent at a lot of these tasks. Or all of them. She’s the single most organized person in the world, a woman who not only subscribes to
Real Simple
magazine, but also fills the pages with color-coded tabs and labels and then archives them, next to her old
TV Guides.

Maybe that’s why women do more housework. They’re better at it. They were born with the tidiness gene. I call Helen
Fisher, an anthropologist who specializes in genetic gender differences hoping she’ll confirm my hunch. No luck. She tells me I can’t blame my laziness on my Y chromosome.

Okay, then. If Michael Keaton can tame a vacuum cleaner, then I can master this domestic stuff, too. I’ve decided the key is to be aggressive, “proactive” as they used to say in business meetings. I have to be an alpha househusband.

My friend Albert e-mails. He works on a cable TV drama starring Timothy Hutton, and his first episode is airing in two weeks.

I type an e-mail to Julie:
“Should we record it?”

Before I press
SEND
, I pause.

The
“we”
in that sentence? It’s actually “Julie.” The true meaning of my e-mail:
“Julie, would you record it?”

I delete the e-mail. I schlep into the living room and program the TiVo myself.

Yeah, I know. I’m a hero. But there are dozens, hundreds of little chores calling out to be done. I’m overwhelmed. I spend two hours writing and the rest of the day reattaching knobs to cabinets and putting stray CDs in containers. To paraphrase the title of a bestselling book about modern-day women, I don’t know how the hell does Julie do it.

THE PERILS OF NICENESS

I’m suffering from a disease. At least if you believe Seattle-based therapist Robert Glover. He thinks millions of American men are afflicted with something called Nice Guy Syndrome. And he’s here to cure us.

He talks to me from his parked car in Bellevue, Washington. The obvious question: What’s wrong with being a nice guy? Well, his definition of a nice guy is being a yes-man to your wife.
“First, it’s inherently dishonest,” he says. “Your wife doesn’t really know what you think, feel, or want.”

Second, Nice Guys might seem nice, but eventually the resentment builds up. “They give and give and give and eventually they’ll explode and all the stuff will come out. I call it the Victim Puke.”

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