Haley Swenson
Senior Writer and Researcher, Better Life Lab
How much do you each think you contribute? Take the quiz
For many of us, the start of a new school year means adjusting or re-adjusting to a new schedule, earlier mornings, a longer list of to-dos, and different or more complicated child care arrangements. While this change of seasons can bring about stress, it also creates an opportunity for families to take a breath and think about whether what they鈥檙e doing is working for all involved, or whether some tweaks might help. This week鈥檚 experiment is a super light-touch opportunity to do just that.
We introduced Rachel Drapper and her startup Fairshare to BLLx users in an interview last year. Since then, she鈥檚 been hard at work to better understand how couples fall into unequal patterns and how to help them out of it. The chore check-in quiz below takes less than a minute for you and a partner to complete, and Drapper鈥檚 research suggests it may be a simple way to get on the same page with one another about how much cognitive and physical labor you鈥檙e each doing, and to think about whether it鈥檚 time for some changes. Drapper has also put together a simple, non-confrontational conversation guide couples struggling with how to move forward. Best of all, FairShare will send you back a breakdown of where you and your partner see things differently, a perfect starting point for getting back on the same page.
By Rachel Drapper, Fairshare
The Basics
We鈥檙e Trying to Solve: Giving partners common ground
Target Audience: Couples, parents, partners
Ages: Adults
Category: Household chores, mental load
Estimated Time: 1 minute
Difficulty Level: Piece of cake
When members of a group report their own contribution to a joint project, they tend to overestimate their share of the work. Researchers that this means people鈥檚 perceived contributions add up to well over 100 percent. The same thing happens when couples estimate their .
Partners overestimate their own share due to good old fashioned egocentrism. We鈥檙e only human after all, and it鈥檚 easy for us to see what we do and harder to notice others. That鈥檚 especially true in the context of housework, which includes a lot of invisible mental labor, where the times we completed household chores are more visible and more easily recalled than tasks completed by someone else.
That鈥檚 why, it can be helpful for couples to check in, and see if they are overestimating their own share and/or underestimating that of their partner, and to assess their current split of physical and mental effort, and whether it is a balance they are happy with.
that everyone鈥檚 tendency to 鈥渙ver-claim鈥 their own contribution can be reduced when people explicitly consider others鈥 contributions. That鈥檚 exactly what this quiz helps to do.
1. Check out this 1-minute quiz. Try Fairshare鈥檚 Chore Check-In to see if you and your partner are on the same page about how much you each contribute at home.
2. Share the quiz with your partner. The quiz works best when both partners complete it, so send the link to your partner, and ask them to fill it out as soon as they can.
3. Check out your results. Within a week Fairshare will send your results over emaila. We鈥檒l include a breakdown that looks something like this:
Take some time to consider your estimated shares of your contributions at home, and how you see things vs. how your partner does. What can you learn from this? Rather than focusing on who is right and who is wrong, take a step back and think about where you differ and why that might be. What are you seeing that they aren鈥檛? What are they seeing that you aren't seeing?
4. Chat about your results. Take a moment to speak with your partner about your results. Were they at all surprising? Do your responses match? Are there differences in the physical versus the mental load? Are you each happy with your shares? If you need some guidance on how to chat about what can sometimes be a tense topic, check out . We recommend starting with your experiences of chores growing up, so you can think through how your differences came to exist.
If there is some room for improvement in your division of labor, consider revisiting BLLx experiment No. 19, The Choreganizer, to see what tasks you could re-allocate for a happier and fairer set up.
5. Check back in in a month. Make a note in your calendar to revisit this experiment in a month, and retake the quiz. Have your shares changed at all? Did the past month feel fairer? Are there further adjustments to make? Rinse and repeat until you land on shares that you are both happy with 馃檪
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