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Rebecca Kamm: The sex/chore ratio

By Rebecca Kamm @rebeccakamm
1:30 PM Friday Feb 1, 2013
What's with all the studies linking chores with sex?Photo / Thinkstock

What's with all the studies linking chores with sex?Photo / Thinkstock

I'm a bit puzzled by a news piece that's whizzing all over the world of internet right now, and it's this: some academics from Washington University are claiming that men who help their ladies with traditionally "feminine" chores - cleaning, cooking and washing, etc - have sex 1.6 times LESS often than other couples, who presumably operate on a Woman does this, Man does that basis.

Before you cry out 'Yes, but the man is doing man things in their place!' - think again.
Because even when men did do typically "male" chores (whatever they are) lady tasks still took up 17 more hours a week than man tasks. And ladies did half the man tasks, anyway. So basically, the laziest guys in live-in relationships get laid the most because life is fair like that.

Interestingly, sociologist Pepper Schwartz says the finding isn't even that surprising, because it matches other studies that indicate egalitarian marriages are less racy. "That companionable part of the relationship turns out not to be so sexy," he told website.

So: I DON'T GET IT. First of all, wouldn't ladies be annoyed their guy didn't help around the house and be less inclined to have sexual relations? Wouldn't women who had decent, equality-minded men feel happier in their relationships, and therefore be more down for bedtime activities?

Maybe the "sort" of ladies who (rightly) expect men to also do chores tend to speak their mind more, so they don't buckle to pressure when their guy is all 'Let's have sex even though you're not in the mood'. And, inversely, maybe the women who don't feel comfortable asking their dude to lift a finger also don't feel comfortable calling the shots in the bedroom? Except that theory relies on men being the ones who want sex more, which isn't always true.

I just refuse to believe it's because when people are in a healthy, equal relationship, they want sex less. REFUSE I TELL YOU!

It's almost as weird as that ridiculous Norwegian study last year that found divorce rates were 50 per cent higher among couples that divided the housework equally. "What we've seen is that sharing equal responsibility for work in the home doesn't necessarily contribute to contentment," said Thomas Hansen, co-author of that paper.

But then there was THIS, which says divorce is actually twice as likely when men neglect housework. ARGHHHHHHH. It's so confusing. And why are these academics so obsessed with measuring correlations between sex and chores anyway? Maybe I should call them up and tell them my new rule for relationships and chore division, which goes like this:

Are you human? Yes, are you? Yes. I am. Ok, let's both use our human arms and human legs to do chores to make our house that we BOTH live in look and smell really nice. And maybe later if we can be bothered we will also have sex. The end.

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By Rebecca Kamm @rebeccakamm
george smith () | 02:40PM Friday, 01 Feb 2013
Maybe it's a psychological thing in the way men and women want to feel needed, pre equality for the sexes times men were needed to bring home the bacon as it were and women to take care of the home. We may not consciously look at things in the same way but that doesn't mean the thoughtline has gone from our subconscious
Mark Fielding (Auckland Central) | 02:40PM Friday, 01 Feb 2013
Were the researchers men??
Meta (Auckland Central) | 02:40PM Friday, 01 Feb 2013
How about this for a theory. Women are generally more sexually attracted to "sexy" men - those slightly arrogant, socially-dominant, testosterone-driven "alpha" males. So these men have more sex with their partners.

But alpha males also tend to be selfish, lazy, uncommitted, promiscuous, and are typically pretty shabby long-term relationship material (hence these relationships eventually end in divorce). And of course, guys like this generally don't bother with housework.

So really it serves women right for neglecting us nice guys, who are more than happy to share the housework equally - despite getting laid less often.

This also explains why scientists are so obsessed with this topic - they're usually non-alpha males. :)
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