I am genuinely curious, why would men suffer more if they did the dishes?
I'm with SweetMorningDew--a guy who does domestic chores--and voluntarily!--is definitely a turn-on.
I've always worked, so I believe household chores should be divided (unless he stays at home and didn't work, then I would expect that he would take care of the house.)
My husband-at-the-time and I were broke college students who were both working and going to school, so we split the chores (I mowed the lawn my fair share of times, too.) When one person cooked, the other one did dishes. Since I did 99% of the cooking, he did the dishes a lot, although we often wound up doing them together.
I still follow that rule, even if I'm invited to someone else's house for dinner. After I eat, I quietly excuse myself and go to the kitchen to start doing the dishes. If it's just myself and a host, we usually wind up finishing them together. But if it's several people, I love it when the host later comes into the kitchen... and is completely shocked to find all the dishes done. (I'll also dry them and put them away if there is enough time, and if I can find where everything goes.)
I'm with SweetMorningDew--a guy who does domestic chores--and voluntarily!--is definitely a turn-on.
I've always worked, so I believe household chores should be divided (unless he stays at home and didn't work, then I would expect that he would take care of the house.)
My husband-at-the-time and I were broke college students who were both working and going to school, so we split the chores (I mowed the lawn my fair share of times, too.) When one person cooked, the other one did dishes. Since I did 99% of the cooking, he did the dishes a lot, although we often wound up doing them together.
I still follow that rule, even if I'm invited to someone else's house for dinner. After I eat, I quietly excuse myself and go to the kitchen to start doing the dishes. If it's just myself and a host, we usually wind up finishing them together. But if it's several people, I love it when the host later comes into the kitchen... and is completely shocked to find all the dishes done. (I'll also dry them and put them away if there is enough time, and if I can find where everything goes.)
Any ways, when we had Christmas or Thanksgiving or Easter company, especially Christmas time, there could be over thirty people sitting down to eat at once, and the women would ALWAYS help clean up, and fuss about in the kitchen doing dishes; it was a way for them to spend time together and talk what they talked about, catching up with each other, and as children, us girls LOVED that they did that, because then we were not stuck *doing even more dishes than normal when we wanted to be visiting with our visitors. Of course, visiting with our visitors sometimes also meant being in the kitchen while the women were in there cleaning up after dinner, but it was not compulsory Then we could also show them where everything went
*All those extra pots and pans! Gaaahhh!!! The worst part of "doing the dishes" Grease.
Of course, pots and pans should always be done last. Glasses first, along with tea cups and coffee mugs, then any plastics, then the china, then the silverwear (we always brought out the fine china and real silver for such family occasions), then all the pots and pans, with the bigger greasy ones going in last. (Guys, are you taking notes? haha) When there was so many extra dishes to wash, somewhere along the line you had to start a new sink of water any ways, because the suds was dead and the water cold LOL.
Kim, didn't your hosts wonder where you were when you always disappeared after dinner? Once a week I have dinner with my daughter, her dad, her aunt, and her grand dad (plus their two dogs and four cats ). I have offered to help clean up after dinner, but they shoo me away after everything is brought back into the kitchen, saying the dishwasher will do it
Did anyone mention the dishwasher on the best invention of all time thread?