The Peterborough Examiner

Man at the beach gives bikinis a round of applause

- AMY DICKINSON Email: askamy@tribune.com Twitter: @askingamy

Dear Amy: My wife and I love the beach. We walk on the beach, kayak, picnic, and in the summer we swim.

When it’s hot and the beach is crowded, my wife invariably asks me, “Are you checking out that girl in the bikini?”

I always say, “No,” which is a lie she sees right through. An argument ensues, dampening our otherwise beautiful day.

I am in my 50s. I have no delusions of long-term futures with young girls (or anyone else) on the beach, but I love to look at attractive females. I try, apparently unsuccessf­ully, to be discreet, but my natural instinct is to stand and applaud. I know I sound like a dirty old man, but I doubt I am alone.

So, how can I be honest and not hurt my wife? And can we still go to the beach? — LYING ON THE BEACH

Dear Lying: I think many of us in middle age passively admire young and beautiful people without being lascivious (your wife might actually be in this category, but from your own descriptio­n, you are not.) And so, no — I won’t help you to find a way to check out women in front of your wife.

You say you know you sound like a dirty old man, and you’re right, you do. In fact, I read this letter to one of my daughters, who rolled her eyes and said, “Ugh, gross.” I doubt that was the reaction you were going for.

All “attractive females” know when they’re being checked out. Some may enjoy the attention, but even if they do, the last thing they want on their day at the beach is a round of applause from you. In this context, your wife’s feelings are more important than theirs — or yours — because she is the one you’re married to. She is (presumably) the woman you’re going home with.

You have a choice here: Either stop checking out women, or come clean when she catches you and risk an argument. The first choice will make your beautiful beach days continue for many years, the second one will probably lead to her turning these beach trips into solo expedition­s.

Stop blaming your wife for being frustrated about your inability to keep your eyes in your head.

Dear Amy: After nearly 15 years of marriage, my wife and I have yet to agree on the cleaning of dishes. I was taught growing up that dishes are not to be left in the sink. My wife grew up in a family that left everything in the sink until, I suppose, someone had time to clean up.

If I don’t touch the dishes she’s left in the sink, she will clean them up within a few hours. The problem is that she gets mad at me whenever I’m washing one of my own dishes and I ignore hers.

I don’t mind cleaning other peoples’ dishes now and then (and we have young kids, which complicate­s the problem). But I resent being expected to clean her dishes nearly every time I go to the sink, while she is never left to clean mine. Any thoughts? — FEELING DISHED

Dear Dished: You are facing an all-too-common domestic question. One obvious solution is that if you want the dishes washed — now — then you should wash them. All of them. I think you know it’s obnoxiousl­y passive-aggressive to only do your own. You two are married parents, not Craigslist roommates. You should each step up and do things that need to be done without keeping score.

In my household, whoever cooks doesn’t have to do the dishes. It’s a pretty simple equation. Getting them washed before breakfast the next day seems like a reasonable goal.

I’m sure there are things you do (or don’t do) around the house that drive your wife crazy, too, so maybe it’s time to revisit the distributi­on of labour.

Also, get your children involved. The kids in my life love having jobs; I have a photo of my 5-year-old nieces loading the dishwasher with such precision and glee, you’d think they were on a trip to Disneyland.

I’d love to hear from other readers here. How do you settle household chore debates?

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