April 7 is International No
Housework Day
No Housework Day
By Robin Steinweg
I used to be
queen of procrastination. I abdicated that throne.
Now you can call
me Sisyphus.
That’s right—the
mythological Greek who was forced to roll a boulder uphill all day, then watch
it plunge back down at night—only to start again the next morning. And the
next, and the next.
Anyone whose
responsibilities include the daily round of family meals, dishes, laundry or
floor-care could relate to Sisyphus. A recurring nightmare might go like
this: a mountainous meatball lumbers
down the stairs toward my kitchen, spraying a trail of spaghetti sauce, grated
Parmesan and a few unruly noodles. It gains momentum. It lurches straight toward
my freshly shined sink.
“Nooooooo!”
The meatball
takes a deliberate turn. I hear its sneering tone as it threatens me, “I’ll
roll over you. You’ll be flat as a sheet.” The meatball leans over me
menacingly, looking strangely like my husband—
“Roll over,
Honey. You’re dreaming. And you’ve got the flat sheet all to yourself.”
The average
American woman scrubs her house for at least seventeen hours a week*.
That means if she lives to be eighty years old, she’ll have spent over eight years of her life cleaning house!
I’d like to slice
a sliver out of that perennial pie. April 7 is International No Housework Day.
Put down your mop
Hang the broom
Watch dust bunnies gather in
every room
Don’t let your youth just
fade away
Take time to celebrate No
Housework Day
Put off till later what needs
to be done
Cooking and housework aren’t
much fun
Take the day off. Augment
your sorrow—
Every mess, every job will
be there tomorrow
Dishes will litter each
horizontal space
Oatmeal will harden at an
alarming pace
Slog through the clutter?
You’ll be confounded
As tasks pile up with
interest compounded
Hm. That didn’t
go quite like I thought it would.
It could be that
the statistics of the average woman’s housecleaning would change in the wrong
direction. I’ve heard that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. If
I take a day off, how many extra hours—days—months—will it take me to catch
up?
Maybe I’ll be
queen of procrastination one more time—
—and put off
celebrating No Housework Day!
*According
to a 2008 study by the University of Michigan.
Robin Steinweg finds life sweet in the
middle of writing, teaching music students, caring for aging parents, adjusting
to having adult children, and nudging life and home to a state of order. She,
her husband and sons live near Madison, Wisconsin.
I love what you said, Lisa---any day can be a no housework day. Yay! Thanks for posting the article.
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