Mary Mary and Martha · My world

A Good Wife


Every once in a while I do  google search for “Good Wife”.  I really enjoy just reading what people think being a good wife entails and how that works itself out in the real world of day to day marriages.  It is also funny to stumble on the different humorous takes on the very idea of being a good wife.  In some circles it seems that even asking the question,  “what should I do to be a good wife?”, is going to make the fur fly.  Take Minette Marrin “the Good Wife is an Old Fashioned Realist“,  the article is interesting, the comments are at times painful.  They make me question the reading comprehension skills of a good number of the commenters.

Marrin lays out a very straightforward and pretty solid point:  “One hard fact a would-be wife has to face � and I was absolutely horrified to realise this myself � is that it�s not possible for a married couple to have two demanding jobs and children and a good relationship. Something has to give. ”   This is a point that seems lost on the detractors in the comments as they are too busy having conniption fits over the idea that a woman is advising other women to step away from the work-force and concentrate on their marriages and childrearing  while they have young children.  Or at least to think about it.  One would suppose that in a world where divorce teeters at near 50% and adultery is more and more common that it would be pretty obvious that marriage, for many people, is failing.   There are many complex societal reasons behind this but the stress of two career parenting is certainly one of them.

If the couple decides that one of them staying home (and yes, dear sisters, usually that means the mom) to raise the children and keep the home is what they are going to do to help reduce that stress then how that plays out is important.  We have done it both ways.  Both Kyle and I have taken a turn at the stay at home parent thing while the other worked.  The fact that he did it for a year and a half and I have done it for seven speaks volumes.  It wasn’t just that he felt very boxed in at home, but I felt wretched working while my little ones were home with dad.  So I stay home, he works.  Other couples might find other arrangements suit them better.  This works for us.  As long as I am going to be home I want to be good at it.

It is kind of sad to me how often the question, “How do I be a good wife?”,  is all but scoffed at.  Several years ago I was a member of a homemaking board where I was pretty active on the “messy” forum.  (I will admit to being a complete failure at housekeeping.)  At one point the conversation turned to the question of what husbands do around the house.  Many of the members felt that it was unfair that their husbands came home from work and then didn’t do so very much to help out.   I made the mistake of commenting that, since my husband put in a full eight hours of work (usually more) at the office plus the commute, I didn’t really feel right asking him to do any housework unless I had put in that much time at home during the day.  I think how I actually put it was “When I put in eight hours of solid housework here per day then I will think of asking him to do more.”  You would have thought that I was advocating that women great their men at the door in lace teddies and high-heels, martinis in hand, purring like a kitten, with a five course meal waiting on the table and only saying, “yes dear”, the rest of the evening.   Were the other women on the board upset because of how many hours they put in compared to their husbands?  No, they had all admitted to being rather slack while at home, daytime TV was a favorite topic of conversation, as well as the obvious time some of them spent online.  They were offended at the very idea of putting their husbands wants and pleasure as a priority… or even just cutting a tried guy some slack at the end of the day.   Needless to say that sort of soured me on that particular board.

The instant “what the husband wants” is put forward as a topic some women will rabidly grab that and start getting worked up about “Who is concerned about what I want?”  Any relationship where two people are worried more about what they are getting out of the relationship then what they are putting in is doomed.  But all it takes when there are two decent people and a modicum of affection is for one person to start saying, “What can I do to make you happy?” and that can change everything.   But that isn’t a popular sentiment and certainly not one you read in the Times very often.  So I was delighted to see Minette Marrin give voice to the question.  One of my favorite quotes from her article is:

“When you want to please your child, or your lover, you think hard about what might make them happy and then do it. It�s not a chore, or even if it is that hardly matters; it�s an act of love or of loyalty. Yet strangely, in marriage this obvious motivational technique seems to wither away with the wedding flowers. Women are convinced it is their right not to have sex when they don�t feel like it, and it is a man�s duty to wash up, though he hates it � and so it is, of course. But that�s not the point. Granny was right; never say no, and never nag. “

Anyone can clean a house, cook a meal or change a baby.  But it is love that makes it homemaking.  While “putting out”, cleaning-up and cooking are the most oft listed items on the list of a “Good Wife’s Duties” the real gem is love and service.  When we serve those we love the service is light, easy and a pleasure.  I hate cleaning up, but if I am cleaning up because I know it will delight my husband when he gets home and I love him then it become a weird pleasure. It is all in the motivation.

Yes, I probably did my career irrevocable harm by staying home to take care of the kiddos.  And yes there are times when I am here pulling my hair out wondering what the heck I was thinking when I signed up for this.  But I also wouldn’t change it.  I have a great deal of liberty to order my life in a way that suits me.  I very much enjoy being here with my children and watching them grow and guiding their learning and it is my husband who makes that possible by going out and working.  We have chosen the traditional arrangement and it works for us.   If I was focusing just what worked for me, what brought me personally the most satisfaction, I might have chosen differently at first.  Because I liked working.  I like the praise and the pay and those tangible rewards.  But there is more to “us” than “me” and probably the most short sighted thing I could have done would have been to make “me” a higher priority than “us”.   Because, while I enjoyed working, I enjoy this life so very much more.

40 bags of stuff. · Mary Mary and Martha · My world · Simplicity

40 Trash Bag Challenge: week one

This is week one, day one, of my 40 trash bag challenge.  If you remember the goal is to get rid of 40 bags of stuff from my home in eight weeks.  A somewhat daunting task if I think about it, but no where near as daunting as the fact that I know that it can be done…. that there is that much “stuff” poked into corners, shoved into bins, stuffed into closets, draws and Lord know where in my house making my life more complicated every day. 

Mary Mary and Martha · My world · Simplicity

Frugal in the News

Being a frugal homemaker is news worthy.

 If you are anything like me the article isn’t ground breaking and is hardly even news.  Though it is kind of neat to see something positive about not spending money in the news.  One quote from the article “It really doesn’t matter what you make. It matters what you spend.”  So very true.  The illustrations of the family spending less than half the average American family on groceries and cruising yard sales for toys is fun, typical among my friends, but fun to read.

It brings to mind an article I read a while back about “green-moms” and how mind-boggling they make the old adage “use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”.  Thrifty living is essentially very “green” because it is based on the idea that less is more.    Or as I quoted in the above article, “You want to save the earth? Here’s a little hint. Don’t. Buy. Shit.”

I will make a little online confession here.  I love money.  I love to play with it, make budgets, see how far I can stretch some amount.  I really do enjoy money management and budgeting.  Yes, I know that makes me a part of a tiny minority, but I it isn’t something I apologize for because it serves my family so well.   I haven’t always been this way.  When I was younger I couldn’t spend my money fast enough.  But I have learned a lot since then and the skills I learned I am trying to pass on to my children.

Mary Mary and Martha · Uncategorized

Contemplative Housework

Modern life can be very hostile to contemplation.  We are busy, the world is noisy, there is always something that must be attended too and more and more our occupations are mind-occupying far more than physically occupying.  It is bad for our health and bad for our souls.  Simple labor is often the catalyst to change things.  We are because we do. 

 I attended a Catholic women’s conference several years ago where one of the talks touched on decorating our homes in order to promote our faith.  The speaker encourage us to turn our kitchen window into a sort of holy space.  A mini-family alter where little reminders of the faith would speak to us as we went about the daily chores of cooking and cleaning.  Mary may have chosen the better part, but someone still has to do the dishes.  t is just a fact of life. 

I have often reflected on the Martha and Mary story where Martha is cleaning and Mary is listening to Christ.  Martha gets herself offend.  I can honestly see this, almost feel it.  Martha clearing the table, Martha cleaning the dishes and Mary just sitting on her touchas listening to their visitor.  I can hear the grumbling in Martha’s mind… “her I am slaving day in and day out while she sits there and doesn’t lift a finger.  Surely the Master will have something to say about this, he can’t possible see me working so hard and approve her slouth.”  I am sure Christ’s response shocked her.  But the “better part”… was it the sitting and listening or was it the listening instead of the internal grumbling?

The dishes and cleaning could have waited.  In fact in Martha’s case they should have.  They had an honored guest in their home and here she was making busy instead of listening to him.  Martha might have chosen to clean up the mess and looked at it as a service and then instead of complaining about her sister she would have been grateful for the opportunity to serve.  It is all how one looks at the work.  But in either case the grumbling attitude that lead Martha to try to entice Christ into publicly reprimanding her sister was wrong.

Attitude is at the core of so many things when it comes to faith.   If we view our religious obligations as drudgery then they become burdens.  I have heard so many people say something like “I can’t stand going to church.  Who wants to give up an hour of their weekend to have someone tell them what they do all week is wrong.”  or “My parents forced me to go to church when I was a kid and I hated it!  I won’t make my kids go to church!”  What an odd thought.  Their parents probably made them eat vegetables and go to school too, but I seriously doubt they would use the same logic universally and allow their offspring to opt out of a balanced diet or an education.   But faith somehow found itself in the “optional” category.

Or maybe it is that parents aren’t completely comfortable teaching their children the faith anymore because they don’t feel that they own it themselves well enough to pass on.  Or it could just be that in our society that seems to prize “diversity” (where diversity is defined as anything other than traditional Western Cultural and Christian faith) they don’t want to seem out of touch or un-cool.  So faith becomes something pushed to the back burner.  You don’t talk much about it and you certainly don’t bring the trappings of your faith into your home decor.  But we should!

It doesn’t take a lot.  A picture here a small statue there can be the little relics of our faith that our children see everyday.  Those things that we see everyday.  Things we connect to and remind us as we go through our daily tasks that God is with us always and we should listen to him.

Books · Mary Mary and Martha

Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World

I really love this title.  I haven’t read the book yet, but I will soon.  As soon as I do I will give you a review,  is Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World a solid Catholic book, is it Christian and find for the Catholic reader or is it problematic?  For now if you would like to order the book you can do so here:


Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World: Finding Intimacy With God in the Busyness of Life (Revised Edition with New Bible Study)

I would love to be able to discuss this book with my reader.  🙂

Mary Mary and Martha

Housework as contemplation. Housekeeping as service.

I think this could be said of and work, especially physical work, but I want to dwell on housekeeping because that is my thing at the moment.

Oro et Laboro

Recently at the Anchoress I read: “If you leave off the radio/stereo/television/phone, housework is contemplative work; it allows you to think about things, argue in your head and give your gut a good hearing. I need that.”

I think we all need that from time to time. There is something about doing physical labor that frees the mind for contemplation. When our hands are engaged and our mind is not we enter into a state of active thoughtfulness. I am sure there is a biological component at work. The body moving encouraging deeper breathing, moving the limbs, stimulating the heart and the blood flow – certainly it all leads to a more active mental state. But when the mind in not engaged in the work itself then we can think of other things more deeply and more clearly.

To often when I am in this state I allow my mind to wonder into self-critical and unpleasant things. This isn’t conducive to doing housework in a pleasant way. This is an area where I need to work.

A spirit of service takes a mundane task and elevates it to something noble. A labor of love most often means doing something because you love it, but it can also mean doing something because you love the one you are working for.

Housekeeping becomes a service when you keep in mind that you are working for your family. A pleasant home to come to at the end of the day for your husband. An appealing place to play and learn for your children. Somewhere that guests are welcome. Where you can relax and not worry that your part of the world is in disarray. A well ordered home becomes more naturally a place of prayer.