Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Husband disapprove­s of disparity

- Carolyn Hax Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com or follow her on Facebook at facebook.com/carolyn.hax.

Dear Carolyn: My husband, “Joe,” and I are embarrassi­ngly lucky: We’re used to working from home and not afraid for our jobs, have no family or dear friends we’re acutely anxious for, and are doing our best to help neighbors. We differ only in how much each of us feels it’s OK to benefit from our luck. Local rules allow driving somewhere nice to then walk/cycle for exercise (with social distancing). Joe says we shouldn’t do that, since others have no car or are confined to home. He was upset that I did a long, exercise-essential walk to the other side of town, and bought ingredient­s not to be had nearer, so I could bake some treats. He doesn’t think we should buy stuff online for our at-home exercise and keeping-me-sane hobbies; he says they’re not essential and we should make do without because others can’t afford such things, and we put the delivery people at risk.

I know we already lived in a grotesquel­y unequal society, with lockdown imposing a different set of inequaliti­es on top of that. Joe feels that if everyone can’t enjoy something, then we shouldn’t either. How do we navigate this? – Lucky

Lucky: I admire Joe’s compassion and sincerity, if not his logic.

About 10 percent of the global population lacks electricit­y or clean water. Is he giving up those?

Pandemic ethics are a worthwhile conversati­on, profoundly so, but empathy alone won’t improve the lots of people suffering. And a purity contest of giving up X and Y, but not Z, based on proximity and perception, is more of a personal sleep aid than a solution to inequality.

I hope instead you and Joe agree that you disagree only within a rather narrow band of like-mindedness on your good fortune and your obligation to share it. Then I hope you turn your collective attention to ways you can live through this time in direct service of people who need help.

One basic example: Delivery people who don’t deliver don’t get paid.

And many people really, really need to get paid right now, making their own risk assessment­s to do this.

So using your good fortune in their service would involve buying the products they deliver, tipping them generously and pressuring the relevant powers that be to pay them more. Instead of withdrawin­g your demand, supply your business conscienti­ously.

You don’t have to massage the ideals very hard to support exercise, either. Maybe your cardiac strength isn’t a factor in emergency rooms today or tomorrow – but as we witness an interconne­cted, interdepen­dent society strain its health systems, we don’t-tell-me-what-to-do! Americans can learn a lesson in the collective benefit of taking care of ourselves.

We could parse these details all day, but ultimately that’s more fiddling. If Joe wants to make a difference, then hand him this encouragem­ent to apply his formidable self-discipline toward political action.

Skipping muffins helps his conscience more than his cause. Backing his beliefs with effort, talent, cash: That makes a mark.

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