Wives as Breadwinners Resent Husbands
Here's some bad news for wives with high-paying gigs: A survey conducted by women's website BettyConfidential.com found that "most women in this role are simultaneously proud of themselves and resentful of their husbands."
The site's editor, Nicole Christie, notes that women who rake in more money than their husbands find it a blessing and a curse—causing "a gap between husband and wife that's difficult to bridge."
One woman, a 43-year-old investment banker, had this to say in the release:
"I have financial independence that my mother never had," she says. "But I do resent my husband because there are so many household chores, community events, and school events that the 'woman of the house' is expected to do." She finds it helpful that her husband works full-time as opposed to staying home, yet says workmen at the house won't discuss repairs with her and that financial consultants defer to her husband, assuming he is the breadwinner and household decision-maker.
The issue of female breadwinners and stay-at-home dads has recently gotten heated airtime at Penelope Trunk's blog. Rebel Dad, a site for stay-at-home dads, was featured on NBC's "Today Show" last month.
One problem with this brouhaha is that it masks how very common female primary breadwinners are. A few years ago, researchers at St. Louis University looked at Census Bureau data between 1996 and 2000 and found that as many as 20 percent of women earned more than their husbands. A BLS report showed the figure reached about 25 percent in families where both partners were working in 2003.
Last year, a professor at Queens College in New York found that full-time working women in their 20s in New York, Chicago, Boston, and Minneapolis earned more than men of the same age range.
Tags: careers | money | relationships | working women | marriage
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Reader Comments
Sigh.
Will it never end?
And I'm told that many men feel threatened in a situation like that, threatened by a woman with more money or influence or independence or success than they have. And I've never understood that. Far from being threatened, I would be thrilled to be coupled with a corporate VP/President/CEO who made two or three or ten times what I do. Why on EARTH do people worry about these things?
Sigh.
I think the point is that women are working fulltime outside the home and yet are still expected to keep the household running smoothly. When men walk in the door after a day at work, they do not have the impusle to put in a load of laundry, unload the dishwasher or put dinner on the table. (I realize I'm generalizing - kudos to you men who do!) And because the women Liz is writing about are not just working, but are the primary breadwinners, they probably feel like the work-home balance is just a little out of whack. If they came home to a clean house, clean clothes and a husband preparing a nice dinner at least half the week, they probably wouldn't feel the resentment.
Yes, I know what the resentment's about. I think you're misinterpreting my comment as saying that women shouldn't resent men who sit on their tushes. On the contrary, I'm sighing about our needing to have that conversation.
I'm one of those men who usually cooks dinner, and I don't understand why we're so hung up on "gender roles" that we have to create these silly conflicts. Life is too short for that.
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