How I Annoy My Husband: Different Versions of Clean
Paul and I have slightly
different versions of cleanliness, but we’re learning to compromise. He’s learning
my version and I’m learning to be patient as he learns it. I know my version
annoys him, but he’s such a trooper he seldom complains about it.
To be fair, he’s
already a neat guy, if you ignore his study. I mention the mess in there on a
weekly basis, but don’t insist he clean it. After all, it’s his space. I think
a mere question about why he’s not throwing something out doesn’t constitute
insisting, right? Paul’s desk is piled
high with papers of all sorts including envelopes, paid bills, and junk mail. A
large bookcase behind his desk has a shelf where we keep the printer. The small
area behind the printer has become a catch all of various objects including a
camera in its case, some tools, and for some reason, a Yosemite Sam Pez
Dispenser without the Pez.
On a smaller
bookshelf near his desk sits a two-tier plastic shelf haphazardly filled with
several years of old tax returns, expired Costco mailers, several pairs of reading
glasses, and other papers he means to eventually file or toss. A gray handmade
bowl holds about $700.00 in spare change. Another obviously child-made clay
bowl is filled with knickknacks like random keys, a Master Lock from middle school
and various hooks of unknown use or origin.
“Why are you keeping
that Master Lock?” I asked him.
“It has the coolest
combination! Number, number, number!”
Of course, I can’t reveal the combination since he might
actually use it again one day.
“What are those keys
for?”
“I don’t know, but I might need them.”
The study also
carries the scent of eau de cat poop since we keep Rufus’ cat litter in the
closet. Our guest bathroom is so small we’d have to stand in the litter to use
the toilet if we kept it there. At least I would. I guess Paul could stand to
the side of the toilet. Rufus doesn’t mind going into the open closet to do his
business and fortunately Paul doesn’t have a good sense of smell. The downside
is that Paul can’t always tell when the litter needs cleaning.
“Rufus, P.U.! Babe, can you please clean the cat litter?”
I can smell the poop
from the living room, and it ruins my concentration while watching the news.
Since Rufus was
Paul’s cat before we met, cleaning litter, cat vomit, and feeding the
always-hungry feline isn’t my job.
We mostly agree on
how neat and clean to keep the rest of the house. I’m not a clean freak, but
some things are important to me. For example, since I cook dinner, Paul does
the dishes. For a while, his timeline for doing dishes was different than mine.
“Sweetie, can you
please do the dishes at night instead of leaving them in the sink until
morning?”
“It’s not a problem. I’ll do them in
the morning,” he said.
“Yes, but the food stays on all night
and we might get ants.”
“No we won’t.”
“But when I do my neti pot, it drains
onto the dishes.”
Paul started washing
them each night.
Paul makes his coffee
in the morning and for several weeks I found coffee grounds on the counter and
even on top of the Brita pitcher. How they got there, I’ll never know.
“Babe, I keep finding
coffee grounds on the counter. Can you please be careful?”
Paul couldn’t figure out how they got
there, so he reenacted how he makes coffee each morning. It was fascinating. Now
he fills the coffee filter over the sink.
Sometimes I find
clothing around the house, but luckily not underwear. I place the item on Paul’s
side of the bed, so he has to put it away before he goes to sleep. He’s also a
messy eater. I always find piles of crumbs on his placemat and on the floor
under his chair. I don’t comment on these minor infractions. I know to pick my
battles.
Paul leaves the vent
on after he takes a shower. I ask him to avoid using it since I’ve heard about
those motors overheating and causing a fire. I think that happened at one of
the schools where I was teaching. He forgets, so I turn it off myself. But he
always remembers to wipe down the chrome shower fixtures and safety bars and
squeegee the glass door.
Since Paul works from
home, I clean the house. When I wiped off the bathroom counters, sometimes I
found tiny black hairs from his beard trimming. Our own hairs don’t bother us, anyone
else’s are gross.
“Sweetie, can you
please wipe up your beard hairs next time?”
Paul’s solution was
to kneel in front of the bathroom counter and trim his beard over the sink. One
of the many reasons he’s so wonderful.
Speaking of
wonderful, Paul always puts the toilet seat down after he uses it. He has done
this since I’ve known him. He also changes the toilet paper roll without being
asked. There’s almost nothing worse than going to the bathroom and having nothing
to wipe with. Maybe in his past life he was asked too many times, “Can you
please bring me some toilet paper?” and he found that annoying.
I agree with you. If a person an animal into the house, they’re responsible.
ReplyDeleteIt didn’t work in my house. Mugo brought home a puppy and said isn’t she cute. If we don’t take her, she’ll be killed. Grrrrrrr
I said, you feed, walk, and fix her.
I fed her. When she had black puppies I told him they looked like him, a little blacker maybe.
elyse sometimes writes like erma bombeck on a weed-hazy bus with willie nelson between concerts.
ReplyDelete---dennis
And Paul really doesn't mind being the subject of all your blogs????? Talk about compensation....how much do you have to pay him for using his name in print? Very cute,,,but the smell of the cat poop....don't think so!
ReplyDelete-- Diane "Dee" Sparago