Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Kindhearte­d husband has nagging problem

- Amy Dickinson

DEAR AMY » My husband is such a sweetheart. I love him for his kindness and tenderhear­ted nature. We never fight, except in one area, which is household chores.

I know he hates nagging, so I refrain from asking him too often to do chores around the house ( like vacuuming and dish washing).

However, I do need help and I feel resentful when he doesn’t proactivel­y help. I don’t know how to encourage him to do it on his own.

Is there a better way to communicat­e or help me achieve this? I know this isn’t the biggest problem out there but it sure is a strain on the marriage.

— Anxious Wife

DEAR ANXIOUS » Your husband’s kindness notwithsta­nding, it is not really kind or tenderhear­ted to watch your partner be overburden­ed by the job of taking care of the household. Furthermor­e, your fear of bothering him with your nagging means that there is a disconnect. His need not to be bothered by you should not be more important than your need — and right — to express yourself.

You and your husband should have regular household meetings where you discuss all of the basics — your schedules, your grocery shopping list, your expenses, and your social or family obligation­s.

At your first meeting, you should agree on a basic chore list. Does he hate to vacuum? Perhaps there is a regular chore you don’t enjoy that he can take on as his own, and you can vacuum. The idea is to agree, form a contract of sorts, and then for each party to act like an adult and do their part. And oftentimes, doing something you don’t enjoy without acting like a martyr is a pretty profound statement of kindness and love. When he does something without prompting, notice it — and let him know that you feel loved.

As I have reported before, hiring a biweekly cleaner has been a game- changer in my own house. If you can afford to outsource some of your houseclean­ing, it is worth it.

DEAR AMY » I could not believe your awful fat-shaming response to “Starving and Fat,” who was overweight but had an eating disorder. You said that any doctor would understand that all overweight people have eating disorders. Reading that, I was completely disgusted.

— Disgusted

DEAR DISGUSTED » My answer was the opposite of fat shaming. “Starving and Fat” was currently overweight but thought her bulimia had resurfaced.

My supportive response was that any competent doctor or nutritioni­st could very easily recognize that an overweight person could also be suffering from an eating disorder. The two are not mutually exclusive. I apologize if the wording of my response created confusion.

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