Si j'ai bien compris, qui touche un nechaf devient un nechaf ?
Annonce
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Aucune annonce.
Les femmes aiment les hommes qui font le ménage
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non, celui qui adore faire enechaf, qui n'ose pas lever le regard avec sa femme, qui dit toujours OUI, OUI , OUI , OUI...et jamais non
Mais dans un sens, une seule serpillère par ménage, c'est assez.
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Bonsoir Haninouna
Wallah tu m'as tué de rire!!!! Durant un instant j'ai imaginé Charles Ingalls dans " La petite maison dans la prairie". Ya hasraaaaaaa! Khti c'est fini ce temps là!!
Nous vivons dans une petite maison au coeur d'un bois peuplé d'animaux gentils. Je prépare de la brioche 100% bio pour le petit déjeuner, pendant qu'il coupe du bois à l'extérieur. Il sue et s'essuie le torse musclé avec son t-shirt car il fait beaucoup d'efforts. Je vais lui apporter un verre de lait 100% bio pour le rafraîchir...Ne croyez pas avoir étouffé la Casbah. Ne croyez pas bâtir sur nos dépouilles votre Nouveau Monde. Kateb Yacine
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Oh ne dis pas cela! Je veux y croire! lol
Nous vivons dans une petite maison au coeur d'un bois peuplé d'animaux gentils. Je prépare de la brioche 100% bio pour le petit déjeuner, pendant qu'il coupe du bois à l'extérieur. Il sue et s'essuie le torse musclé avec son t-shirt car il fait beaucoup d'efforts. Je vais lui apporter un verre de lait 100% bio pour le rafraîchir...
On tient là le successeur de Michael Landon...
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walah que je lave la vaisselle et je passe la serpillière dans la maison, je fait a manger et je met le linge a sécher .......tu tombe je tombe car mane e mane
après avoir rien fait ...on a souvent le sentiment d'avoir faillie faire ....un sentiment consolateur
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Envoyé par Maya's Lullaby...mais ce qui me déplait dans l'article, c'est justement l'exagération, le renversement des valeurs traditionnelles et surtout des rôles. La photo est d'ailleurs très intéressante, car elle montre une femme assise en train de prendre du plaisir à voir son mari déguisé en soubrette passant le balai...
Par exemple, si les 2 conjoints travaillent, le soir lorsqu'ils rentrent à la maison, la femme sera contente si son mari l'aide dans les différentes tâches ménagères mais ne le sera pas forcément si son mari court se relaxer en regardant la télé pendant que madame fait tout toute seule (s'occuper des enfants, faire le ménage, faire à manger...etc)!
Sinon, pour la photo, elle a été faite par le couple pour illustrer l'article d'une manière amusante. Elle ne signifie pas que la femme nargue son époux!
Ci-dessous, le texte de l'étude de la London School of Economics dont parle l'article plus haut.
The link between divorce and men who help around the house
Divorce rates are lower in families where husbands help more with housework, shopping and childcare, according to new research from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
A study of 3,500 British married couples after the birth of their first child found that the more husbands helped, the lower the incidence of divorce.
The research, Men's Unpaid Work and Divorce: Reassessing Specialisation and Trade, was carried out by Wendy Sigle-Rushton, one of several UK academics comprising the Gender Equality Network (GeNet), part of the Economic and Social Research Council's (ESRC) Priority Network Programme. Findings are published in the latest edition of Feminist Economics.
It explodes the theory that marriages are most stable when men focus on paid work and women are responsible for housework, showing instead that fathers' contribution to housework and childcare stabilises marriage, regardless of mothers' employment status.
Economists have long argued that rising divorce rates, which began in the early 1960s, are linked with steady increases in the numbers of married women working, because marriages in which men take responsibility for paid work and women remain in the home make both spouses better off.
Dr Sigle-Rushton, senior lecturer in social policy at LSE and research associate at the Centre for the Analysis of Social Exclusion, said:
"Economists have spent a good deal of time examining and trying to explain the positive association between female employment and divorce. However, in doing so, they have paid very little attention to the behaviour of men. This research addresses that oversight and suggests that fathers' contribution to unpaid work at home stablises marriage regardless of mothers' employment status."
Dr Sigle-Rushton's research analysed data on married couples who had their first child in 1970, a time when most mothers of young children stayed at home. This data came from the British Cohort Study, a nationally representative study that followed the lives of 16,000 children born in one week in 1970.
Dr Sigle-Rushton focused on 3,500 couples who had stayed together for five years after the birth of their first child. Around 20 per cent divorced by the time the child was 16. The fathers' participation in housework, shopping and childcare is measured in the number of tasks the father was reported, by the mother, to have done in the previous week.
Just over half of fathers, in 1975, were reported to have helped with none or one task (51%), 24 per cent carried out two tasks, and about one-quarter carried out three or four, the highest contribution.Nearly a third of mothers were employed, only five per cent of whom were working full time.
It found that, relative to families in which women are homemakers and men do little housework and childcare, the risk of divorce is 97% per cent higher when the mother works outside the home and her husband makes a minimal contribution to housework and childcare. However, there is no increased risk of divorce when the mother works and her husband's contribution to housework and childcare is at the highest level. The lowest-risk combination is one in which the mother does not work and the father engages in the highest level of housework and childcare.
Dr Sigle-Rushton said:
"The results suggest that the risk of divorce among working mothers, while greater, is substantially reduced when fathers contribute more to housework and childcare.
"That men's failure to contribute to housework can increase the risk of divorce may seem surprising, given that all of the families in my sample had fairly young children over the time period they are followed and a divorce would have had substantial economic consequences and would not have relieved most mothers of housework and childcare responsibilities."
Putting the research into a modern-day context, she added:
"The structure of the labour market, rates of female labour-market participation, rates of divorce, and expectations about men's and women's gender roles have all changed considerably since 1975. But this study underscores the importance of taking into account relationships between's men's behaviour and marital stability. In economic and sociological research, there has been too great an emphasis on women's paid work and not enough attention given to the division of unpaid work."
Par Sigle-Rushton - The London School of Economics
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Par exemple, si les 2 conjoints travaillent, le soir lorsqu'ils rentrent à la maison, la femme sera contente si son mari l'aide dans les différentes tâches ménagères mais ne le sera pas forcément si son mari court se relaxer en regardant la télé pendant que madame fait tout toute seule (s'occuper des enfants, faire le ménage, faire à manger...etc)!
je passe l'aspirateur volontier quand j'ai le temps, je l'aide a debarasser et preparer la table si elle me laise faire d'ailleurs, idem pour la vaisselle ou autre choses, le bain des enfants, ca lui procure un moment de repos et de repit qu'on passera agreablement ensemble et pas chacun de son cote!....If you're not writting, you're not thinking!
The Dice Man.
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