The Vagenda

The Toilet Duck Stops Here

cleaning
 
 
Poor The Menz. The internet is horrible for them. It’s full of women whingeing about getting raped, complaining about being told what to wear and getting their knickers in a twist over stuff like FGM and honour killings – stuff which usually happen thousands of miles away! And for some reason, this is their fault! What have they ever done? They just want to sit quietly with a refreshing beverage and some telly and OH JESUS FUCK IT’S THAT ADVERT WHERE MEN CAN’T DO HOUSEWORK. Why are they always being portrayed as stupid and inept? That’s real sexism, right there. Who will take up their plight?
 
I will. Because I want to support our allies. And I believe a man who does housework is one of greatest allies a woman can have in this great battle we call “of the sexes”.
 
I have dated men who would have torn up a chick’s Gloria Steinham paperback in shocked rage, were you to call them sexists – and yet, these beacons of feminist hope fundamentally believed that when it came to the ‘bleach arts’, women were “just better at that sort of thing”. And instead of sticking the toilet duck straight up their poop shoot a la Lily off Bridesmaids, I rolled my eyes and inhaled deeply of Domestos.
 
Now I live with a man who has no notion of “girl stuff” and “boy stuff”. A man who has washed more pairs of my own pants than I have. A man who scrubs and sprays and picks up my dry cleaning with no agenda beyond “this is what human beings do, to be kind to each other.” And even though I like to think of our household as a gender neutral zone, it makes him masculine as fuck. He is sexy as anything. It makes me want to bang him all the time. And it means that I never, ever wash up while resentfully thinking, “Why always me, always?” I never have to fight the temptation to put Vanish in his tea.
 
My boyfriend is quietly leading a feminist ally revolution, in SE10. And I know that guys across the country are joining in. 
 
Women are not born wearing Marigolds. We are not “keepers of the nozzle”. We are not “better at that sort of thing”. But maybe our Mums, consciously or unconsciously, passed on some message about the importance of keeping one’s house nice because that was how our Dads liked it. Maybe, when you’re at home all day with a child, you’re more likely to notice and keep track of the stains and splodges that materialise than that guy with a briefcase who also lives there, and returns home every night at seven, tie askew, complaining loudly about “the Sanderson account”. Maybe you lived with some “lads” at university, who, for a “laugh”, collected semen and urine in pint jars, and would smack your arse and shout, “Wahey! Good wifing!” when they saw you tipping their bodily fluids down the sink. Think about every single time you have heard or read a cultural reference in which someone is going home to their Mum to get their washing done. It’s never, ever Dad. Even though, logically, sometimes it must be. 
 
Cleaning is not sexy. It is not aspirational. Cooking is messy, and sensual, and creative, which is why it has been co-opted by the telly, and why boys want to have a go. The only time I have seen a male cleaner properly featured on television is in the episode of Black Books where Bill Bailey hires Mark Gatiss to stroke some shelves for dust while murmuring, “Mmmm, filthy”. 
 
And guess what? Women want to be messy, and sensual and creative. They don’t want to be reduced to admiringly mopping up some guy’s jus. But cleaning, and childcare, and communication with the council about the bins are undeniable. The sun rises in the east, the unwiped hummus patch will turn green and stinky, and before too long we’re all living in E. coli pits of political point scoring, in which no-one can be invited over for beers.
 
Let the men who clean rise up, and speak with loud voices! Let us create a future world in which we see an old advert for Flash and cry, “Ahahahahahaha, man, people were CRAY in 2013!” Let the teen boys of tomorrow turn to their Dads for laundry advice!
 
And if you’re the sort of man who has ever pointed at a stain and turned to his wife or girlfriend and said, “But you’re better at that sort of thing,” stop talking and start paying for domestic help. 
-DB

9 thoughts on “The Toilet Duck Stops Here

  1. This is awesome. My BF did genuinely used to say to me ‘But you’re better at that sort of thing’, but he’s been taught how to do it now and housework/cooking is split pretty equally. So yay for housework equality, and down with sexist ads!

  2. I learnt much more about cleaning etc from my ex-boyfriend than I ever did from my mum. Probably because she hired a cleaner (and they were always ladies – funny that). My dad hasn’t ironed a shirt in 27 years, and my mum doesn’t wear anything that needs ironing. Yet she does it. Again, funny that.

    The 18 months I lived with a male feminist were probably the best months for my feminism. I didn’t even know I was a feminist before.

    Funny, that.

  3. My mum has passed on the message to keep the house tidy because that’s how she likes it! She goes away for one weekend and my two brothers, my dad and I all go crazy with the mess for a day and a half, celebrating our freedom before manically tidying up before mum gets home again. It’s actually rather hilarious. My youngest brother has become rather obsessed with cooking shows too and now does a good portion of the cooking! Yay men.

  4. I totally agree, but this is slightly depressing, I thought we were way past the point of fighting for chore equality. My mother and father were equals when it came to chores and so us kids, and they were born in the 50s, raising us in the 80s.

  5. I always take my washing home to my dad, because my dad is the one who does the washing. And the ironing. And the vacuuming. And a lot of the cleaning. And, yes, all the car-washing etc. He even cooks now that he’s permanently on the morning shift. He is a feminist, although he wouldn’t describe himself as such.

    And yet, in the late 70s and early 80s, he was dead against the various bits of equality legislation that made it easier for women to get jobs with the Royal Mail, because it was ‘taking jobs away from the men.’

    People are funny.

  6. Brilliant. My boyfriend does sometimes use the ‘but you do it better than me’ line… but I think he’s just trying to flatter me into doing more around the house. He’s a dish washing legend and I love him for it. More men like this!!

  7. I grew up in a house where a man did most of the cleaning and washing. I now live with a man who does most of the cleaning and washing. For me the notion of cleaning and washing being “woman’s work” is total bollocks. It’s human being work, and the job falls to the person for whom it is most convenient. Just so happens that me mum hated ironing and Dad loved cooking and I can’t do the washing up due to chronic eczema, and my other half works where we live with ready access to the washing machine – so that’s the way the lot has fallen, to date. Should it change I’ll don my marigolds (or not since it irritates my skin condition, lets say metaphorical marigolds instead) and get stuck in. In the meantime I’ll forward your invitation to rise up to both my Dad and my boyfriend. They are well and truly there on the front line.

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