Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Roles: Not the Kind You Serve at Dinner


I have been thinking a lot about traditional roles in the household when it comes to husbands, wives and kids. A lot has changed over the last fifty years and I want to be the one to illustrate those changes.

Let us consider, shall we, this ad from Housekeeping Monthly from 1955. I can't say much for it because it really speaks for itself. But when I first read it, I was compelled to make some revisions for our day and age.





The following is my version:














The Good Husband's Guide

  • Have dinner ready. Plan ahead, even a week before, to have a delicious meal ready, on time for her return. This is a way of letting her know that you have been obsessing over her and are concerned about her well-being every second of the day. Most women don't want to cook for your lazy ass when she comes home so the prospect of not having to do any more work is part of the warm welcome needed.
  • Prepare yourself. Take 15 minutes to pump up and take a shower so you won't be smelly and fat when she arrives. Touch up your deodorant, dab on a little cologne and be fresh looking. She has just been with a lot of smelly nerds and doesn't need to come home to one.
  • Be a little gay...no wait, don't be gay. Be ecstatic when she walks in the door and don't say anything stupid. Her boring day doesn't need any of your BS and it is your duty to make sure you don't give her any.
  • Clear away the clutter. Make one last trip through the main part of the house before your wife arrives and make sure you didn't leave any of your dirty magazines in plain view.
  • Gather up the empty Cheetoh bags, beer cans, porn, etc., and then run the vacuum over the tables.
  • Over the cooler months of the year, you should run her a hot bubble bath for her to unwind in. While you're at it, why not pour her a glass of wine? Be available to wash her hair and rub her feet, too. After all, being her personal slave will provide you with immense personal satisfaction.
  • Prepare the kids. Plug them into a Barney DVD and forget it.
  • Greet her with a flex of the pecks, a smack on the hiney and tell her a hard day's work looks good on her.
  • Listen to her. For God's sake, just listen. Don't talk. Don't just nod like an idiot when you know are thinking about the game on Sunday. Let her do the talking - remember, her topics of conversation are way more important than yours and quite frankly, she doesn't want to hear any of your BS. Like I said.
  • Make the evening hers. Never complain if she comes home late or goes out with the girls or does other fun stuff without you. Face it, buddy. You went outta style faster than DayGlo.
  • Your goal: Try to make sure your home is a place of peace, order and tranquility where your wife can renew herself in body and spirit.
  • Don't greet her with your BS. How many times do I have to say that?
  • Don't complain if she is late home for dinner or even if you don't see her for an entire week and she never calls. Count this as minor compared to the BS her boss may have put her through all day. Back to the BS. No BS.
  • Don't ask her questions about why she bought that pair of Monolos or question her judgment on the trip to Fiji she is planning with her friends. Remember, she is the queen of the house and as such will always do whatever she feels the need to do, whether you like it or not. You have no right to question her.
  • A good husband always knows his place.
(Note: No husbands were hurt during the writing of this entry.)

9 comments:

Sarah said...

Brilliant. Where do I get this husband?

pflower10 said...

I am sitting here AMAZED that an article like that could have been published FOR REAL!!!!

"You have no right to question him?" Who the crap came up with that mess. I much prefer your version of it!!

Love the blog!

Heather O. said...

Niice.

Mrs Mac said...

Oooo WAY to polite. WAY too polite! I'd have gone much further.
HAHAHAHAAAAA!!!!!!!!!

Can I put a link to you on my blog????

Dani said...

It is a good thing times have changed because that original article makes me extremely angry. That was back when, in the husband's manual it said, "It's okay to beat your wife if she looks at you in any negative way." Awful. I am so glad our world has changed.

Michelle Glauser said...

I love your blog!

liza said...

Keep 'em coming. You are hilarious!

LunaMoonbeam said...

Ok, I'll probably be crucified for this. Most of that list is crap. HOWEVER, I agree - the second a spouse (either one of us) walks through the door is not the time to dump all the day's questions and issues on the table. Let the person come home, decompress, change their clothes....then discuss things over dinner. (If you had a bad day, give him a call and ask him to pick up McD's on the way home. That will give him a good hint.) I think the same goes for kids - when BBJ is older, I'll try to let her decompress before I bombard her with questions just to kill my curiosity/boredom. ;-)

Ok - kill me later. I majored in Speech Comm and....well, it's just a good idea.

-sheepish-

The blog's great, though!

Family Adventure said...

Ha, ha. I saw the Housekeeping article a while back, and actually thought about changing it around. I am glad I didn't because you did a way better job!
Just found your blog, love it!
Thanks,
- Heidi