As far back as 2001 I was lamenting the gender divide when it came to performing household chores. In Time women took a stand on burdens of housework, I reported "Statistics New Zealand found that women do more housework than men" and noted that most of us probably didn't require hard data or deep analysis to understand this truth.
"[H]ousework is a soul-destroying process which, by its very nature, is undone as soon as it is performed," I wrote, adding that the issue possessed "misogynistic subtext" and that the attitude of men towards housework was "part of the undeclared war against women". With a feminist bee in my bonnet on the matter, I clearly sensed a conspiracy.
Thirteen years on the subject continues to occupy the minds of researchers. It was reported in A man's behaviour is influenced by female relatives - study that "[m]en who have sisters are less likely to perform housework". This research is "part of a new wave of evidence that women have a profound influence on men's outlook". Sociologists believe that "[s]isters, daughters and wives all have a distinct impact on the way men behave".
It was explained that "[y]oung daughters are more likely to be asked to help in the house ... and the habit of watching their sisters work prevails for boys into adulthood". In other words: if your partner doesn't do his share of the housework you can now blame your parents-in-law.
In a longitudinal study carried out over twenty years and with just a single subject, I did my own research in this area. In the process I discovered for myself what it takes to convert someone averse to housework into someone who keeps a home in tiptop shape.