While on a recent shopping trip to Wal-Mart, I found myself
behind a woman who appeared to be in her late 50’s or early 60’s. When the
cashier presented the shopper with her total, it became apparent that she had
mistakenly left her wallet in her car and would need to retrieve it before
finalizing the purchase. In a welcome spirit of accommodation, the cashier
suspended her transaction and offered to ring me up in the interim. The
walletless shopper reappeared just as I was being given my total and I noticed
that she seemed to be staring at me with what appeared to be disbelief.
I pretended not to notice her unusual fascination and handed
the cashier my coupons. This was apparently too much for the woman to bear and
she said, “Excuse me, but are you grocery shopping for your wife?” I replied
that I planned to eat some of the food as well but that I was indeed completing
our household grocery trip. This admission was so unexpected she nearly dropped
her recently reacquired wallet:
“You are kidding me! Is this just a one-time thing?”“No, in fact I am usually the one that goes to the grocery.”“That is something else. You know that I have been married for over thirty years and my husband hasn’t so much as picked up a loaf of bread on the way home for work! In fact, I fill up his truck with gas every single week. I doubt he even knows which side gas thing is on!”
Ill-equipped to respond to such an admission, I think I
mumbled something like “good for him” and swiped my card as she continued to
wrestle with her domestic epiphany. It was as if her entire world had been
shattered with the discovery that it was possible for a married man to interact
with a fuel pump. I couldn’t shake the feeling that my very presence that day
had set into a motion a chain of events that could lead to the dissolution of a
thirty-year marriage. I had a vision of this woman going home and confronting
her recliner-bound spouse about all the other aspects of domestic life that she
had been lied to about.
I shared this story with my father, who responded that the
“southern kept man” was not as rare a creature as I had assumed. He recounted
tales of an acquaintance who, upon walking into a buffet, would immediately be
seated as his wife scurried off to prepare a plate and beverage for him. She
would then present this culinary offering and upon indication of his approval,
she was released to prepare a plate for herself. This behavior was so engrained
in their relationship that the entire process was expected, assumed, and
unspoken.
This was simply the tip of the iceberg. Further research
revealed that my community was inundated by men unable to make their own
telephone calls, retrieve their own prescriptions, or place their own refuse in
a garbage can. I focus-grouped this reverse domestic chivalry with some married
female friends to see how it would play it out in their lives and out of a
sense decency I will refrain from reprinting their responses here. Let’s just
say that they indicated strong disagreement with my Wal-Mart friend.
I realize that everyone’s idea of matrimonial tranquility is
different and perhaps these women are perfectly content with this arrangement.
Maybe their husbands cook and scrub the toilets in exchange for these services,
but if you are too lazy to select your own entrée at a buffet it is unlikely
that you can find the motivation to turn on a stove.
Furthermore, if these men are that helpless at full capacity
what happens when they fall ill? A simple cold is likely to require sponge
baths and a bedpan. I have always heard that older couples that had been
together for a long time often die within a year of one another. I used to
believe this was attributable to the profound emotional bond they shared
between them but now I am starting to suspect that the wife simply goes first
and the husband dies of starvation because the truck is out of gas and he
cannot remember anyone’s number because he hasn’t dialed a phone since Nixon
was in office.
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