Is there anything as pointless as doing the dishes? With four humans and two cats in the house, it’s a rare hour that sees our countertops uncluttered by crockery. I can count on my tween for one dishwasher unload per day, otherwise it’s usually on me to scrape, load, and unload, not to mention baby the precious cast-iron pans that require a cleaning and re-seasoning regimen bordering on witchcraft.
The cycle of dishwashing is so unsatisfying because it is so rarely ever done. Something is always drying or waiting to be put away. As soon as everything is finally clean, one of my kids will make a snack using three plates and five different utensils, or my husband will channel his inner Emeril and decide dinner prep requires every bowl in the cabinet for his mise en place.
Dishwashing is a prime example of the much-maligned, oft-ignored category of maintenance work. One of the most compelling sections of Angela Garbes’ excellent, Essential Labor: Mothering as Social Change, is devoted to examining the idea of mothering as maintenance. In our culture, we value building new things but not maintaining them once they’re completed. Politicians race to build new stadiums and bridges but fail to allocate enough money to maintain our roads and sewers. It’s become a recurring joke during the last two presidencies that every week is “Infrastructure Week” and still we have bridges crumbling into bodies of water.
Most domestic work is maintenance work. Caring for children and the elderly is repetitive, so are most of the tasks which now fall under the umbrella term, #adulting. When it comes to maintenance work, either we must designate someone to do it, or simply declare it “unimportant” and try to get by without it. Either the invisible labor of delegating all household tasks, or sweeping all these tasks under the rug. Both have their pitfalls, and neither liberals nor conservatives seem to offer good solutions.
In the conservative Christianity I was raised in claimed to value the work of “homemaking” while saying that it was so important that men couldn’t possibly be bothered to do it! Meanwhile second-wave feminism touts the importance of women working outside the home but fails to account for the fact that someone needs to watch the kids, buy groceries, cook dinner, and make the dentist appointments. In many privileged households, that someone is often an underpaid immigrant woman. In others, women pick up the “second shift” after their nine-to-five is over, a recipe for burnout.
In light of all this, is it really that surprising that Trad Wives and #softlife are having a moment? There’s a lot to mock about this movement, certainly—it’s often delusionally aspirational not to mention creepy, falling somewhere between Stepford Wives and the Third Reich’s idealization of Aryan mothers.
But I also wonder if Trad Wives’ popularity isn’t a sign that more women are recognizing the failures of capitalism-aligned feminism. We tried to #girlboss until we hit the glass ceiling, we went through #metoo experiences, and now we want to just run off to a picturesque farmhouse and bake bread all day. It’s a fantasy, sure, but the desire comes from a real place.
What would it take for our culture to value maintenance work? How can we, ourselves, change how we view this work? Can maintenance work ever be enjoyable?
One glimmer of hope I have is the “errand hang” where friends get together to complete errands or chores together. It reminds me of the story behind one of my favorite soul food dishes, red beans and rice. Back in the day, southern women would often get together on Mondays to do laundry. They’d take Sunday’s leftover hambones and throw them in a pot of red beans and vegetables to simmer next to their washing. Frankly, it sounds amazing.
I recognize that I’m part of the problem. I’ve allowed for value capture—I value writing and activism much more than maintenance work, so I often rush through errands and chores. Going to Costco with a friend is slower, but it’s also more enjoyable. And post-COVID, I’m trying to get together with a friend at least once a week in person. So I’m going to give errand hangs a try. Maybe they’ll even wash cast-iron with me?
What is your least favorite chore? Do you value “maintenance work”? What would it take for our culture to value maintaining old things as much as making new ones?
BONUS MATERIALS:
short video “There is a Kind of Love Called Maintenance”
are any of your local bridges about to collapse? You can check here.
How many lives are saved by toilets and proper sanitation? Probably a billion.
I’m a SAHM, some days I even wear long skirts. But it’s not a calling, it’s not a vocation, my ovaries and sense of womanhood have very little to do with it (except that now I can take naps when I’m on my period) - it’s just what I’m doing now. I left a job I didn’t like working for sexists who didn’t pay me enough. Now I get to spend my days drudging through maintenance work while listening to Beyonce and taking bike rides in the sun. I’m paying for these days with a diminished earnings and earning potential, less saved for retirement, and some intellectual boredom. But the kids will grow (a landslide, if you will) and I’ll move on to doing something else then. And that thing will not have anything to do with my identity as a woman, but it will probably include napping when I’m on my period.
Ugh, my least favorite home chore is dusting and sweeping. And cleaning the bathroom. I’m actually terrible at cleaning, but I do keep everything decluttered. Also, I don’t mind vacuuming or cooking, but I loathe grocery shopping and meal planning.
Maintenance work in general is very boring, both in the home and at my job. When I ran a business, my first hire was a bookkeeper because I did NOT want to do that tedious work.
I love the idea of errand dates. When I was younger, I invited my best friend over to keep me company while I cleaned my apartment. I didn’t need her help, I just wanted someone to liven up the monotony. Eventually we started swapping cleaning dates - every other week we switched off cleaning each other’s apartment. Ahhh, those were the days.
It’s been interesting to see all the Trad Wife stuff come up in social media in a more mainstream way. I see a lot of it because I follow gardening content, which bleeds into homesteading content, which is filled with Trad Wife stuff. I came out of a church community that heavily influenced Trad Wife before it was a hashtag, and this is the type of audience I have in mind as I write my parenting memoir. So many moms around me felt pressure to “do it right” as they raised their kids.