JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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For some years, my wife has worked full time at gainful employment
away from home while I have worked -- well -- semi-full time less
gainfully at home. As a result, we have adopted a lifestyle that would
probably be anathema in macho societies where it would be unlikely to
find the alleged head of the household in the kitchen drying dishes for
the little woman.
In the present division of duties in my family, I not only dry the
dishes, I wash them too, among other domestic chores. But all that is
going to change soon. My wife is moving her working base of operations
home at the end of the year, so we are presently negotiating a new
lifestyle. Since she is trying to protect ground established under the
old arrangement, I have to guard against being blindsided.
She has asked me to identify househusband jobs I would especially like
to shuck off on her, which would appear to represent progress.
Accordingly, I have broken such duties down into three categories: those
I enjoy, those I tolerate and those I detest. And at the top of the third
category -- and the job I will most insistently hand back to her -- is
managing our social life.
In suburban middle-class America, such arrangements are normally
worked out between the women of the house, using a kind of conversational
shorthand which men find both confusing and -- for various reasons --
irritating. I got deeply involved in this process simply because I was at
home. Callers reached me instead of Higher Authority for so many years
that I was finally accepted by the more frequent calling parties as a
kind of necessary and not-too-bright roadblock in the creation of social
arrangements.
I suppose I could have avoided a lot of this by not answering the
phone, but I have a few things going on in my own life that make ignoring
the phone difficult. Also, while dealing with writer’s block -- which
happens frequently, especially during the baseball season -- I tend to
clutch at any interruption.
One of the many downsides in my being forced into this role has been
the temporary alienation of several of our more fragile friends because
my poor hearing makes it difficult for me to recognize familiar voices,
and I thought they were trying to sell me something on the phone. The
word quickly got out to all the telemarketers in North America that I was
home and available, so I pretty much divide my less-gainful time between
telemarketers who want to loan me money at usurious rates or contribute
to a fund to buy USC a quarterback and people who want to invite us to
dinner. I tend to yell a lot at telemarketers, and this has occasionally
carried over to social callers.
But even when I play social calls absolutely straight, I have the
narrowest of parameters within which to work. If the date I have been
given isn’t acceptable and another date is suggested, I lack the
authority, the confidence and the information to make such a decision
without going through proper channels.
There is seldom a problem with my calendar, which is mostly blank.
Looking at November, for example, I see appointments with a dentist, the
Harbor High student I’m mentoring, one lunch and a reminder to pay our
mortgage and watch the UCLA-Washington State football game. The only
evening engagements are my monthly poker game and the new Stephen
Sondheim show at the Laguna Playhouse, which I look forward to eagerly.
My wife’s calendar, however, is a quite different instrument. She
keeps it in a book I can never find when I need it, and -- instead of
noting engagements cleanly as I do on a calendar over my desk -- she
scribbles them into this book in a kind of cryptic code that is
frequently scratched out, leaving such surviving notes around the margin
as: “See H&F; friend?” “Make soup, salad,” “Call LA? See play tonight?”
“Look chair,” “Joan & Arthur back. Dinner?” On several November days, she
has the single pristine message, “Work.”
From this confusing melange, I am supposed to determine whether we are
available to some woman caller chafing on the other end of a phone line
and wondering what the hell I’m about.
To assist in this process, I have a crib sheet of most frequently
asked questions and how to answer them. For example: “Can we bring
something?” (No) “What time do you want us?” (6:30) “Can we come casual?”
(Wear tennis shoes) When the dinner is at our house, I’m instructed to
find out if our guests have any dietary limitations, a question that took
on renewed significance after I forgot to ask and we served a beef roast
to vegetarians.
I got a warning the other night of what it may be like under our new
arrangement from my neighbor Ron Darling, who comes home early a couple
of times a week from his law practice to pick up his children from school
and free his wife. His voice on the phone -- unlike mine -- is wholly
unexpected and leaves women callers for his wife in a quandary. When they
find she isn’t home and say they’ll call back, he always offers, rather
insistently, to take a message. They box with this a few moments and then
invariably say, “Oh, that’s all right, I’ll just call back.”
“They are quite certain,” he says, “that a man capable of arguing a
case in court or running a business or teaching a college class or wiring
a house is so socially retarded that he is incapable of passing along a
message to his wife as complicated as telling her what time the kids will
be picked up in the morning.”
Well, I can certainly deal with that a lot better than serving as a
social secretary. I’ll still do the dishes, but I might want to throw the
telemarketers into the new mix on my wife’s plate.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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