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Why does partner get extra housework?

- Adapted from an online discussion. Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Dear Carolyn: Please explain again why the person with the higher standards always has to do the work. My partner

(P) doesn’t clean up the kitchen to what I consider basic standards — they do the pots and leave condiments and any spices I might have forgotten to put away out, don’t wipe down counters or stove. If P cooks, they leave stuff out, including food packaging — the trash can is right there!

I mentioned that I want them to get clothes in the hamper and P said I should “just let it go” and that they “don’t say anything about what (I do) that irritates them.”

I am not a neat freak, and I try to be patient, but I am getting very resentful that if I want a calm, clean space it’s always my job. Worse — if it’s important to them, like they wanted a clean, uncluttere­d background for Zoom meetings, they do it, but won’t help with what’s important to me, like cleaning off that bookcase they pile stuff on that shows up in MY Zoom meetings.

I can’t be the only one facing this. How can I get them to help maintain standards that might be a bit higher than what they want, but less than I want? — Higher Standards

Dear Higher Standards:

The person with the higher standards always has to do the work if they aren’t willing to leave it undone when the other person refuses to do it.

Note that this is all fact, no fairness.

So, the facts you need to manage are these:

1. If you are going to live with P, then you need to accept the unfairness of doing more to keep things as clean as you want them to be.

2. If you want both fairness and a calm, clean space, then you will need to live alone or with a different partner.

Obviously you don’t like that math, or else you would have left already — or learned to embrace the extra cleaning as a price you happily pay for P’s company or other contributi­ons. The one way around the bad fairness math is if there’s some chore or area of chores your partner does do well, gladly, or out of necessity. When you have that to work with, then you can push all of that to P’s side of the ledger.

One caveat: When you have a slop box where you dump all the stuff P neglects to pick up, and cook your own meals, and do your own laundry and leave them to theirs, that’s effective — but also one step from the door.

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