I
hauled the ironing board out of the closet the other day, and heading down the
hall past my son’s room I decided to make a joke.
“Hey,”
I said, trying to distract him from Mass Effect Halo Galaxy Land or something, “did
you ever see one of these before?”
And
that’s the only attempt at domestic humor you’re going to get from me today.
I’m fed up with stereotypes, the persistence of snotty vision that boxes up men
as incompetent in activities of daily living, with the underwear on the floor
and the reluctance to clean anything and the inability, really, to function
without that second X chromosome around to pick up afterwards. I’m tired of it,
tired of people who perpetuate this sort of casual sexism in the name of
fairness or funny business.
And
full disclosure: I am, and have been for a long time, one of those people. But
no more.
My
wife left town last week, as she usually does in the summer. And every summer,
it seems, I drag my software out from underneath the dirty laundry and write a
column about our male-only household, how we survive on pizza and marathon
movie sessions, how we start shopping for plasma TVs, how we slide down the
evolutionary ladder until we bump into Paleolithic Man, grunting and hunting
for cheese and cheese-like material.
I
write about all of our cute male behaviors, such as spending an entire week
conversing only in quotes from “The Matrix.” I write about how we feel free to
drink from cartons and leave the seat up and throw towels on the floor after
our showers, except showers? An afterthought, and maybe not all that necessary
during Greek Week in this house.
And,
finally, how we have to spend the last day frantically polishing walls,
repainting entire rooms, removing a couple of dead rodents and of course
opening every window in the place, just to cover our tracks as men. Oh, what
pathetic creatures, such slobs and so helpless without the ladies.
So
listen up: I iron.
I iron
my shirts, once a week. Some of them get wrinkled in the laundry, which I also
do once a week. And my son does his laundry, although he’s not so big on the
ironing.
Those
working bacteria incubators known as bathrooms? I clean those. My son runs the
vacuum cleaner twice a week at least. Floors are mopped, sinks are scrubbed,
meals are prepared, bills are paid, checkbooks are balanced, bread is baked and
grass is most definitely cut by men in this family. So there.
And
while I’m continuing with my fairness doctrine, my wife is a very busy woman,
juggling three different jobs in a fragile economy, on the road a lot, while I
work at home and usually lift nothing heavier than a stray quotation mark.
She’s also one of those creative intellectual types, always studying and
learning and not all that interested in mindless work. I, on the other hand,
enjoy this sort of thing, the more mindless the better (and for good reason).
The
truth is, stereotypes are fun for the occasional joke but not worth much in the
marketplace of real people. Lots of men get along fine without women, and women
certainly can live full, rich, exciting and peaceful lives without men.
Relationships are varied and complicated, and they encompass a lot of different
people. I’m not exceptional or an iconoclast; I’m just a guy. A guy who likes
to iron. And bake.
So I
baked cookies this wifeless week, on a whim, trying out a new recipe. I’m not a
fan of cookies usually, since they tend to be full of unnecessary goodness and
contain calories no middle-aged man needs, and also come in a convenient shape
and size for quick consumption. But I was in a mood, so I baked six big
chocolate chip cookies, 5 inches in diameter, and left them on a rack to cool.
And
came back a few minutes later to find one left, and my son with chipmunk cheeks
and chocolate covering his face, and this is where I defeat the purpose of this
entire column.
“This,”
he said, sort of muffled, “is not what it looks like.”
It was
exactly what it looked like, though, and as it turns out what we’ve been
missing this past week isn’t a stereotypical woman, but a specific one. The one
who keeps the music playing, makes us laugh, cheers us up when we’re blue and
loves us the way we are. The one who gives us advice and serves as a rudder,
sometimes, to help us manage our more compulsive sides, to tell us when a
shower might be good and when five cookies are four too many. We miss her, and
we have a lonely house this week.
We
also have a new TV.
What?
We needed one.