We Argue Constantly About Who Should Cook, Clean, and Do Laundry

**We Argue Constantly About Who Should Cook, Clean, and Do Laundry**

Some couples fight about money, some about in-laws. Us? We fight about chores. Every week, without fail.

It always starts the same. I walk into the kitchen after work, and the sink is full of dishes. Or he comes home and sees I haven’t folded the laundry yet. Then the accusations start flying.

“You never cook!” I snap.

“Well, you never take the trash out!” he fires back.

We go in circles—who did what last week, who’s more tired, who’s carrying the heavier load. By the time we’re done, neither of us even remembers what set it off.

The truth is, it’s not about dishes or laundry. It’s about fairness. It’s about respect. It’s about both of us keeping a mental scoreboard of who does more and weaponizing it the second one of us slips.

Last night was the worst yet. I got home late, starving. He was already on the couch scrolling his phone. The counters were sticky, the sink overflowing.

“Couldn’t you cook something?” I asked, not even trying to hide my frustration.

“I worked all day too,” he said flatly. “Why should it always fall on me?”

“You didn’t even *try*,” I shot back.

His jaw tightened. “And you didn’t do the laundry like you promised. So we’re even.”

That word—*even*—hit me like a slap. Since when was marriage about being “even”? I wanted partnership, not a petty game of who owes who.

The fight spiraled fast, louder than usual, uglier too. At one point he said, “You’re acting like my mom,” and I swear I felt something inside me snap.

I didn’t throw a plate. I didn’t scream. I just looked at him and said, calmly, “If you see me as a nagging mother instead of your wife, then we don’t have a marriage anymore.”

He froze. For once, he had nothing to say.

I walked into the bedroom, grabbed a suitcase, and started packing. He followed me, stunned, asking if I was serious.

“I’m done keeping score,” I said. “I’d rather live alone and do everything myself than live with someone who treats me like the enemy.”

And I meant it. I zipped the suitcase, rolled it out the door, and left him standing there in the mess we’d built together.

Because here’s the thing no one wants to admit: sometimes it really *is* about the dishes. Not because they matter, but because they reveal who’s willing to carry the weight with you—and who isn’t.

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