![]() ![]() Actually I was initially going to interview 100 women for the book because that's what Betty Friedan did for The Feminine Mystique so I thought that's a good place to start. He doesn't even realize what's going on around him." And my husband sits there drinking his coffee on his phone. So, a typical story I would hear would be the woman who would say: "In the morning I'm rushing around, I'm getting lunches together, I'm helping the kids finish up their homework and making sure everyone's wearing socks. None of the women I spoke with had complaints about their husbands as fathers - it was more of a co-parenting issue. On hearing the same story over and over again In a recent New York Times op-ed, What 'Good' Dads Get Away With, Lockman cites a study that estimates that at the current rate, it will be another 75 years before men are taking on half of caregiving and household responsibilities.Īuthor Interviews 'Women's Work' Delves Into Gender Roles At Home And Relationships With Domestic Help "There's always going to be someone whose husband is doing less." "That attitude really stops women from advocating for themselves as fully as they might," Lockman says. Women told Lockman they were grateful their husbands weren't as bad as other husbands. All the Rage: Mothers, Fathers, and the Myth of Equal Partnership explores how American mothers and fathers are far from 50/50 when it comes to childcare and domestic responsibilities. In her new book, Lockman demonstrates why women have every right to complain. Women would express legitimate grievances and then say: "But I know women who are in worse situations, so I don't want to complain too much." "It was actually a way of walking back their own anger," she says. The gratitude concerned her - here's why: "Our expectations are really not being met and that leads to a lot of anger."ĭarcy Lockman conducted interviews with 50 women about the division of labor in their households, and she heard a lot of anger and a lot of gratitude. but it doesn't manifest," says psychologist Darcy Lockman. "We go into parenting expecting something like parity. ![]()
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