The Columbus Dispatch

Dual lists of chores can help Type-a and laid-back pair co-exist

- Carolyn Hax Write to Carolyn — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@ washpost.com.

Dear Carolyn: I am extremely Type A — organized, motivated, mind always on. I am also very particular about things around the house — an unfortunat­e trait I inherited from one of my parents. My husband (of one month) is much more laid-back, a trait I otherwise prize in him. He is extremely willing to help me around the house and asks me nearly every day what he can do to help.

What I really need is to not have to tell him. I recognize my own role in this as someone who is so Type A and overbearin­g that it's probably hard for him to find his way. How do I let go and let him step up? I thought about making a list of all the tasks that go into running the house just so he could see it laid out, but that just felt like more work to me. — Faithful Reader You both write a list. And neither of you ever uses the "help" construct for chores, because that codifies the imbalance. You do, he helps? No. You contribute, he contribute­s. So, two lists, not just one, written separately, and include preferred schedules. Bathroom cleaning, for example — daily, weekly, monthly, when you hear screaming and it's not human? The comparison will be illuminati­ng.

When your list comes out longer than his — I can say "if," if you'd like — you can then talk about what timing might be excessive and whether those extras are even necessary. This can't be, after all, just about his contributi­ng more to make you happy. This is a shared life you've just embarked upon. You also need to expect less to make him happy. The lists will also reveal what each of you sees as a priority. He can certainly take charge of his top list items for both of you without asking you what he needs to do today. Delegating to reflect priorities can also address the issue of his needing reminders, if you let it. A spouse without clean underwear does laundry without being asked, no? And hungry spouses buy food. The chores that come with urgency built in are his; the tasks a laid-back person can conceivabl­y ignore forever are yours.

One more chore I recommend you tackle, if you haven't already: unpacking all that Type-a-verypartic­ular stuff. You aren't going to change who you are, and shouldn't. But you can understand who you are to a greater depth than "an unfortunat­e trait I inherited," especially if you're going to bring it to bear on another human.

If there's unexamined stress or under-managed anxiety driving you, then examine or manage it. Trust me: Love hates being told what to do.

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