R
rayne89
Guest
There is a difference between doing it out of love and doing it because it’s demanded of you. I do many things for my hubby out of love because I choose to. (By the way the bed warming thing is sweet, my hubby would love that) My husband does the same.I don’t know if this applies to this case, but there are some things that are not done out of tradition so much as out of affection. My husband puts the paste on my toothbrush for me, if he brushes his teeth before I have. Now that it’s cold, if he’s going to get home from work after I go to bed, I go to sleep on his side. That way, when he gets in, all cold and tired, his side is already all nice and warm. (I’m all warm, too, so my “cold” side warms up much faster than when I first get in.)
It’s not that I can’t put toothpaste on my own brush or that he can’t sleep in a cold bed. When life gets going fast and you hardly have time to talk, it’s nice to know you’re being thought of.
I like chivalry. Men are not women, women are not men, and a little bit of gender-specificity in manners is a way to celebrate that you like the way God made you and the opposite sex, too. But it is even nicer when someone does something for you, not because roles set up before you were born, but because of an affection that is new every day.
But at my inlaws its an expectation (and yes my FIL is from the south -hillybilly south that is-no offense to anyone.) The women serve the men their food and then go eat in the kitchen. My husband, from when we were teens, wouldn’t have dared dumped me in the kitchen to go sit with the men. The men don’t open doors, they don’t help bring in the groceries, they don’t cook and they don’t say thankyou. I can’t recall my FIL ever saying thank you even when given a gift. But he has no problem telling you if he doesn’t like it. He wouldn’t give up a seat to let his wife sit down -after all he got there first.