It’s time to take back our time and
spend it on meaningful activities instead of
succumbing to the futility and moral
pressure of endlessly cleaning our homes.
My favorite chair is surrounded by
piles of art supplies. There is yarn stacked
high in baskets that I once aspired to
organize. Metal boxes of paint and brushes
are squashed next to jewelry supplies that
are threatening to fall off the edge of a
too-full shelf. I want so badly… to want to
clean. But then I invariably set aside such
desires and settle in to knit for the night.
This is not what the mini Marie Kondo inside my
brain wants. But it’s what the giant beating
hub of the artist inside my heart
wants—perhaps inspired by the likes of Yayoi Kusama’s
organized chaos. And, it’s what all women,
indeed all people, ought to want as we
aspire for a just world.
Cleaning is women’s work. This is
not an assertion. It’s an observation. In
spite of the rise of the stay-at-home dad—a
trend that began in
the mid-2010s—women still do most of the
housework. According to a 2020 Gallup poll,
women are “much more likely than their
husbands to care for children on a daily
basis, shop for groceries and wash dishes.”
Indeed, there has been relentless
messaging pushing us to maintain clean
homes. We may be appalled by the overt sexism of vintage
advertising, but even modern commercials for
cleaning products are often gendered.
Even when stripped of gender,
today’s messaging about maintaining
cleanliness pushes us to wage a losing
battle against germs and clutter. At the
doctor’s office, bathroom walls sport signs
reminding us of just how many millions of
fecal bacteria gather on the undersides of
our shoes. News stories breathlessly report
scientific findings of how disgustingly
bacteria-ridden everything is, from door knobs to the lemon slices that
restaurants serve on water glasses.
It’s enough to terrify us into
submission and to go way past the
commonsense practice of frequent handwashing
with soap to using antibacterial spray
cleaners on every surface. Indeed, the early
months of the COVID-19 pandemic were a
redemptive moment for the obsessive cleaners
among us who already had a large stash of
Lysol on our perfectly organized shelves.
There is a strong moral component
to the obsession behind maintaining clean
homes. We may harshly judge those
people—especially the women—whose messy
homes we step into, mentally running our
fingers along dusty shelves and noting
greasy prints on the metal refrigerator. We
worry about being judged
when people enter our messy homes. We are
expected to feel shame over the
clutter. Even our mental health suffers
when we can’t keep up with cleaning, as per
some studies, likely
because we fear being judged for being
messy.
Countless online cleaning guides
offer “secrets” and “tips” to keeping a
house clean. They rarely, if ever, account for the fact
that there is no secret to house cleaning
except 1) having the desire to do so, and 2)
setting aside the time to make it
happen. The former is achieved by the
aforementioned societal messaging and moral
pressure to clean. The latter is made nearly
impossible by the demands of jobs,
especially on working parents. And still,
far too many of us waste our precious
moments of free time endlessly cleaning our
homes.
There is a third (dirty) secret:
wealthy families simply outsource house
cleaning to domestic help. The rich are so
reliant on hired help that in the early
months of the COVID-19 lockdowns, it was
revealed just how helpless they
are when forced to clean their own homes.
Few labor and legal protections
exist for domestic workers, who
are disproportionately women of color and
immigrant women, and are often hired “under
the table” or exploited. In California,
domestic workers won a modest “bill of rights” in
2013. In 2016, that bill was updated with protections for overtime
pay. In 2021, the state passed a law that
current and former workers helped to craft,
protecting them from dangerous working
conditions. But the guidelines for
protection remain voluntary. Domestic
workers still suffer horrible
treatment and even trafficking.
It turns out that the rest of
us—Marie Kondo included—eventually succumb
to the madness and mayhem of real life.
Kondo, the queen of clean, in a recent Washington Post profile
found that after having multiple children,
balancing a life of work and child-rearing
leaves little time—and, dare we say,
desire—to maintain perfectly clean
countertops: “The multitasker seems somewhat
humbled by her growing family and her
business success.” Kondo’s fame and fortune
likely afford her the ability to hire
cleaning help. Still, she revealed, “My home
is messy, but the way I am spending my time
is the right way for me at this time at this
stage of my life.”
That should have been her message
all along. And those of us in the know
admired her charming cleaning ethos rather
as we might view a stunning piece of
performance art—envy-inducing,
discipline-requiring, and fleeting.
As a person of Indian origin, I
grew up in a sparkling clean home, where
wearing shoes indoors was strictly
forbidden. Both my grandmothers were
relegated to the quiet submission of
presenting perfectly clean homes and
producing daily multidish family meals,
while balancing paid jobs as teachers. The
demand to clean is a direct descendant of
the enslavement of women in the home. It’s
no coincidence that the labor rights long
denied to domestic workers also descended
from the exploitation of the
enslaved. House cleaning work is the
worst sort of mind-numbing drudgery, of the
type that we have been conditioned to
believe is nonnegotiable and a precursor to
domestic peace.
Today, I routinely reject the
desire to clean and instead embrace all the
possibilities of creativity that were denied
to my female ancestors.
As for shoes in the home? There are
plenty of studies
one can look up to scare oneself into the
submission of leaving shoes outside. But, as
one infectious disease expert, Amesh Adalja
of John Hopkins Center for Health Security,
told Vice, “Just taking off
your shoes isn’t really going to
substantially diminish that microbial load
you have in your house—nor would you want it
to—because a lot of times, 99 percent of the
microorganisms on the planet don’t do any
harm.”
As a working woman with multiple
jobs, responsibilities toward two children
and two elderly parents, a home, and more, I
am often asked how I do it all. How do I
write, make dinner and shop for groceries,
knit and paint, care for my community,
agitate for political change, and still take
time for self-care? My secret—one that is
rarely revealed in moral exhortations
against messy homes—is to not clean until
it’s absolutely necessary. And, most
importantly, to reject the sexist pressures
of guilt and shame that are inflicted on
women. It’s time to take back our time.
This
commentary
was produced by Economy
for
All,
a project of the Independent
Media Institute.