Female friends often tell me that their male partners just aren’t as good at this work as they are––that they do it partly because it would cause more stress to hand over the tasks.
At work, I’m training a new coworker. He’s been assigned to create some diagrams that we need for compliance reporting. He hasn’t made them the same way I would have. I’ve been tempted to produce my own diagrams the way I would want them, but I have steeled myself against that impulse. His diagrams are acceptable to the higher-ups and they’re not wrong in any respect, they’re just not how I would have made them. I need to learn to be OK with that.
That’s a serious life skill. Avoiding micromanaging gives you more time, makes the other person feel more empowered, and avoids conflict in your relationship. Props!
After reading the article, I came away with the opinion that we should be doing away with all of the pageantry of holiday gatherings, and focus instead on the connections we’re tying to maintain.
But that’s really the thrust of the article, isn’t it? The fact that so many men seem to not care about the appearance and presentation is the problem in their eyes.
E. Edited for clarity.
I would much rather support women liberating themselves from the pressure of all the pageantry and appearance than having to do all the pageantry and appearance stuff.
that said, some people just like that stuff, and not from external pressure afaict. It’s a weird dynamic in a lot of ways
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Yeah that kind of situation is tricky, any time one party wants something and is willing to spend a lot of resources to get it and another couldn’t care less, of course the person who personally cares is gonna do more work more enthusiastically than the person doing it for other reasons. It leads to a weird imbalance that can be tough to navigate, especially when the person that wants it can’t do it alone. That generalizes to tons of situations too, not just hetero holidays
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