Every Friday Fandango invites bloggers to share a post written on the same day in a previous year. It is fun to reblog old posts. Naturally, when I went back to 2013, my first year of blogging, when hardly anyone read my posts I did not have one from 4 November of that year. I could have looked at another year but I found that I did have two from 5 November so I’ll wait a couple of hours and post this even though it will really be Flashback Saturday for me.
This post was written about my husband David and I know that family and friends who read this blog will probably laugh and say “Typical David”. I don’t think he would mind me sharing this post with a (hopefully) larger audience.
Venus and Mars do the laundry
One of the household jobs my husband doesn’t mind doing is laundry. In fact I would go so far as to say he enjoys doing it but as I know many of you will understand his way of doing laundry and mine are very different. We have come to an unspoken agreement that he will not wash my clothes unless I ask him to.
Here are some reasons why:
- He puts my white underwear in with his black jeans
- He doesn’t treat stains
- He loses my socks
- He uses the same machine setting for everything
- He claims not to know which drawers my clothes belong in
For a two person household we seem to do an awful lot of washing. My husband is a big man and he goes through a lot of clothes so he has got into the habit of doing laundry at night. Sometimes he does it in the evening but sometimes if he gets up in the middle of the night to go to the toilet he throws a load of jeans and track suit pants in the machine while he’s up. His reasoning is that it saves electricity to wash at that time and I have no argument with that.
I, on the other hand, like to wash in the morning so that I can do other chores while the machine is running and still get everything washed, dried, ironed and put away in the same day.
Last year, after 35 years of managing without one, we bought a dryer. Winters are wet here in our corner of Tasmania and after ten years here I’d come to the point where the sight of a blue sky made me run to put a load of washing in the machine so as not to waste the sunshine. I still like to hang things on the line but the dryer is a blessing in winter. Naturally Hubby also prefers to run the dryer at night to save electricity. Luckily we can’t hear it from our bedroom.
My only quarrel with all this is that having washed the clothes and dried the clothes he loses interest and they stay there in the dryer until he needs something. Then he will go and take out the item he requires and leave the rest hanging half in and half out of the dryer.
I am sure you have all read household hints about how to organise the family wash. Each family member has their own laundry basket and once the clothes are sorted and folded they take the basket and put their clothes away. Well the other day I retrieved Hubby’s laundry from the dryer, folded it all neatly and carried the basket to our bedroom for him to put away. A day later it was still there. He’ll just take the clothes out of the basket to put them on. Half of them are back in the dirty laundry basket now. I haven’t read any hints about how to fix that problem; none that work anyway.
Occasionally when our washing machine has broken down and often before we bought the dryer, we would have to resort to using the local laundry. As I don’t drive we would either go together or it would be Hubby’s job to take our clothes to be washed. He would usually come back fuming because of “inconsiderate people who fill the dryers and then go off for hours” and minus at least one article of clothing, usually one of my socks. I was once very embarrassed to pass the laundry and there, hanging in the window waiting to be claimed, was a pair of Hubby’s very large underpants. If I need to use a dryer that is full I will generally take the clothes out and fold them up neatly. If the owners come back they usually don’t mind and often thank me for taking the trouble to fold everything.
I find going to the laundry can be quite a sociable occasion which is lucky because whenever we go on a trip I seem to spend a lot of time washing clothes. When we’ve stayed at caravan parks on holidays the laundry is the place where I’ve often had interesting chats with other travellers. We once had a very enjoyable conversation with a Canadian in a youth hostel laundry in England while waiting for the world’s slowest dryer cycle to finish. By the time it did we had discovered that the two movies we’d been talking about “Flying High” and “Airplane” were one and the same film! So wash days can be fun when you are on the road and at least I can keep track of the socks!
More Washday Blues:
Here are some wash day stories from another blogger.
- Funny Memories cheer up Washday! (silly9.wordpress.com)
- Monday – no washday for me today (silly9.wordpress.com)
Yes, even when it comes to household chores like doing loads of laundry, as they say, men are from Mars and women are from Venus.
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Garry isn’t a great washer because I’m not sure he has any idea how to use the new washer/dryer, but he is a very serious folder and ironer. He seems to have mostly give up ironing (finally) but he tends to berate me for not properly FOLDING clothing. When he is done folding, it looks like it just came from a shop. His father was a tailor. That may have something to do with it!
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Loved this, Vanda. Who would think laundry could make such an amusing topic to blog about!
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