Depending on the prevailing agreement and arrangement you have with (y)our house-help at home,
There are particular jobs, broken down into smaller descriptions like tasks, details, instructions and check-boxes
Which, by your expectations as their leader, have to be accomplished and scored against,
Right?
Well then, has it ever happened to you that this whole arrangement you have been having, all this while, just vanishes in a split second?
Say over the phone or even in person when (y)our house-help has left (y)our home to go have themselves a period of rest?
Or even in a moment when they see you off to your workplace and thereafter make good use of this window in time to leave (y)our home and their job announced?
They have quit the job and you!
Hhhmmmmβ¦
How is that first day, in change of routine and βlivingβ?
Where you went on about your life, rest assured that there is somebody at home going to give (y)our home a whooping of a cleaning, cook you proper meals just like you want them, respond to service delivery agents of National Water or UMEME and generally, keep you informed of whatβs going on ku kaalo?
Hhhmmmβ¦and how about the second day and the third?
That bunch of thoughts did stream down in me as I was thinking of carrying on this conversation here
About the various attitudes and trends, we have in Uganda about unpaid and domestic care work.
Yes, I know for a fact, that this conversation is one of those that many of us donβt want to have but love to βreapβ from, as it stands
In the name of what many of us have come to term as gender roles!
Let us begin with looking closer at this thing called βthe patriarchyβ.
I will try to break down what that word means, according to Mona Eltahawy,
βPatriarchy is a system of oppression that privileges male dominanceβ
She goes on to explain this further, by use of an octopusβ¦.where the head of the octopus is patriarchy and all those tentacles you see on it represents something say capitalism, sexism, racism, ageism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia among others. Furthermore, she says that depending on where in the world you live, either two or more or all of those βtentaclesβ are working in unison to keep that head of the βoctopusβ alive.
βPeople just donβt see it; it is like asking a fish what water is to them. It just wonβt know what you are talking about. The very air we breathe, is patriarchy. It is glorified and it is universalβ.
Now that we have covered that, I read a paper, recently released by OXFAM titled, βGenerations of work without pay: How the unfair domestic and care workload is keeping women poor and worsening inequalityβ
Within itβs introduction, there is an argument holding that there are three key steps in ensuring that the unpaid domestic and care workload remains with women. First of all, women are socialised to shoulder the workload from childhood. Secondly, their position as care givers is reinforced by social norms and cultural practices and lastly both women and men are punished if they deviate from the status quo!!!!
Understanding these steps, and the ways in which the unfair work load keeps women in poverty through generations, is necessary to if we are to have the right policy and practice interventions to enable women reach their full economic potential and contribute to transforming the economy.
Remember when we chatted about the economics that we have studied over time?
These economies which are packaged so well, for the profit and privilege of one person over another or group of people?
And what these βeconomiesβ do to us?
Yeah, this βeconomyβ and itβs major currency happen to be one of those economies!
I think you need to read this report on inequality, put together by OXFAM named, βWho Is Growing?β
It says that, in a nutshell, that businesses employ men, much more than women
And in event that all the people, out there, that participate in domestically caring and working for them quit, then the entire economy would grind to a total halt!
That is because men would have to leave their paid day jobs and stay home to look after the children and others who need care. They would have to clean, wash clothes, do the shopping, drop children to school and trade their boardroom meeting for that school meeting!
Male politicians, members of parliament, the president, would all have to put aside their grand callings to do essential unpaid domestic and care work! Imagine that? Wouldnβt that be nice, for a change?
My guy, when I touch that point, I bet your pupils are wide open in arms
Looking at a language you have been sucked in, to understand and relate with quite well
The language of moneyβ¦.the language of βprovidingββ¦.the language of being βthe headββ¦.the language of entitlement to care from other peopleβ¦.
I challenge you to unlearn that language as soon as possible
And learn a language of equally contributing to this economy of unpaid and domestic care work!
Imagine that? Wouldnβt this be nice for a change?
~ Womenβs unpaid care work, while not officially recognized in national statistics, is not only necessary for everyoneβs wellbeing but is as valuable as any other economic activity. ~
Β
Perhaps, we need to define care that goes unpaid as well as work that is domestic
Unpaid care and domestic care work is defined by OXFAM, in their position paper called, βGenerations of work without pay: How the unfair domestic and care workload is keeping women poor and worsening inequalityβ as work done in service of others and motivated by reasons other than financial compensation. It can include caring for children, elderly and sick people. It also includes washing, cooking, shopping cleaning and helping other families with their chores.
Unpaid work includes food, fuel and water collection and other energy provision, informal unpaid work, family labour in agriculture, etc. Β (Sida)
In there (Unpaid care and Domestic Care Work), there are 3 components that need to be examined closely
βCare of personsβ is one of them. It involves devotion to mostly, but not uniquely, to the direct care of persons with care needs, such as children or elderly/sick/frail adults. The time devoted to the care of persons overburdens women (and men) who engage in care relationships, limiting their opportunities to engage in gainful employment, education, politics or leisure.
βHouseworkβ is the second component of unpaid care and domestic care work. You can view it as household chores such as cleaning, cooking and doing laundry/ironing for family members, which can also be understood as βindirect careβ.
And finally, we have got the βunpaid community workβ. This can refer to unpaid care activities provided to households beyond oneβs own. It includes work undertaken for friends, neighbours or next of kin, and work undertaken out of a sense of responsibility and duty to the community as a whole.
The way I see it, there isnβt anything made up of astrology science that we men canβt do, is there?
We can do all thatβ¦but this requires us to unlearn a lot of what we knowβ¦.for we will need to slay the tentacles of that giant octopus we talked aboutβ¦previously.
Once that is done, we must do all this work, ourselves first, for ourselves, before we can ask for help due to the overwhelming number of tasks we have to get done!
Any task or work you do, in this economy is directly reflected in your general living, well-being, lifestyle and character.
You donβt really want to be βthat guyβ who canβt even wash their own linen, do you?
That guy who always leaves their plate of food and cup right where they have eaten fromβ¦with all the micheere littered all over the world, do you?
Be the guy that uses his eyes more and βegoβ less, at home and in the house, and at the community gathering as well.
This, in my perspective, is just how much we must do, at our very own individual levelsβ¦.there is a much larger level, thoughβ¦.where a whole lot more work needs to be doneβ¦as soon as yesterday!
And that, is at the national level or government level!
At this level, which many of us ignore for personal reasons, a lot goes onβ¦.or is at least, expected to.
To begin with, we have what is called the, βNational Development Plan IIβ. As far as unpaid care and domestic care work is concerned, this plan recognizes women as key providers of unpaid care and domestic work!
Personally, I would say they are the βkeyestβ providers we have, of care and domestic care work that we donβt pay forβ¦
The National Gender Policy by integrating Gender in reform policies and programmes while the National Social Protection Policy offers policy direction in decentralizing service delivery, especially in education, water and health.
Waitβ¦.gwe guy, do you even what the National Gender Policy is?
Policies such as the National Childhood Development Policy and the National Health Policy all have a bearing on womenβs unpaid care workload and strategic investments in these sectors would reduce the amount of time and effort women spend on unpaid domestic and care work.
Did you know this?
Indeed, reducing womenβs unpaid care work is at the heart of womenβs economic empowerment. Gender equality, as anticipated under Ugandaβs Constitution, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the and the protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peopleβs Rights on the Rights of Women, is only fully possible if we address the centuries old problem of women shouldering most of the unpaid care work!
Only and only, then!!!
Global and national development goals cannot be attained when half of the population is shackled with unpaid and underappreciated work for generations.
Manya the SDGβs and the National Development Plans β¦.those are the goals or plans we are talking aboutβ¦.
If we are to raise boys and girls to equally participate and contribute to the economy, we must start in the small and very essential family unit to model equal behavior, which includes equal sharing of domestic work. I love the sound of this⦠(hihi)
Our Governmentβ¦in this case (the Government of Uganda) must put in place and implement laws and policies that will accelerate the recognition, redistribution and reduction of womenβs unpaid care workload. This will in turn reduce economic inequality between men and women, enabling families, communities and the country reach development goals faster.
But remember, you make up this βgovernmentββ¦with your vote and hard-spent money called taxes! Do so cautiously, eehβ¦
Me thinks the Government should pour mmmoonneeyyyyyy into 3 key sectors that ensure we are all alive by the end of todayβ¦.health, education and agriculture.
I say agricultureβ¦not because I am a foodie but because without βgood food and drinkβ, we canβt function. Everything will go wrong. Besides, these investments would have the direct consequence of reducing the unpaid care workload on women who provide most of the care to the sick, most of the labour in the agricultural sector and for whom education holds the key to access to better paying work in the public sphere.
Somewhere, in that mix, National Water and Sewerage Cooperation has to βduloopu di bombββ¦.so many of us have to walk at least 20 kilometres every day, just to access what we can call βdecent waterβ, if that is even a real thing! If that is still too much, we still need as many boreholes as possible, littered all over the places we live, study and work at. That way, we tick off 2 very crucial items off the unpaid care and domestic care work checklist, si ndiyo? (Haha)
Heyβ¦.donβt even think of doing this when the elections have comeβ¦.donβt try that shit now!!!
Capture the value of womenβs unpaid care work in national statistics so as to value womenβs unpaid care and domestic work and how much it contributes to the economy. What do you think about this?
Me thinks it is a great ideaβ¦we can always look back at this data as the numerous stakeholders that we are including women and girls taking the lead on this, the Ministry of Gender and Labour falling in there too, the Ministry of Education as well, our various Local Councils in the country, our Magombololasβ as wellβ¦.olaba otya awo?
You know, it is widely said that if something isnβt written down anywhere, it didnβt happenβ¦.
Hiβ¦hiβ¦.hiβ¦kikiβ¦.kikiβ¦kiβ¦.hiβ¦hiβ¦(claps hands repeatedly)
Guys, who came up with these things?
βMen who do care work are labeled, mocked and shamed for doing work that is deemed to belong to women. In Kaabong, for instance, a man who cooks is nicknamed, βloroomotβ and perceived as greedy for always being in the kitchen. In Kabale, a man who helps his wife with kitchen work is believed to have been subjected to βkibwankulataβ, a form of witch craft. Men who share domestic and care work are compared to dogs who stupidly follow their owners wherever they go. In the central region, too, a man who shares care is deemed witched and bereaved of all his senses except basic ones such as those to enable him cross the road safely- phrased as oyo bamuloga nebamulekera agasala ekuuboβ.
Hahahahahahaaaaaaaβ¦.
I am sorry I had to laugh first before I could paraphrase what I read in OXFAMβs paper titled, βGenerations of work without payβ
We really do a number on ourselves, people!
Have you had the saying that βthe patriarchy rewards and punishes at the same time?β
Yeahβ¦.that giant octopus, with so many tentacles that we talked about?
That is where, we are at, unfortunately!
Where you are ridiculed for learning and practicing a very vital life skill, which you will need
And praised or glorified for doing nothing and learning nothing!
For one thing, as boys and girls grow older, the gap between how much time they each spend on care work grows biggerβ¦.much much bigger!
Can you imagine that so deep rooted are gender roles in terms of unpaid domestic and care work that most women, even when they feel they should get more help, do not honestly bother to ask for it?
I want to leave you some thoughts:
- How many hours of your day do you spend on unpaid care and domestic care work?
- Are you objectively ready to listen to what has been said about this subject?
- What if all the women that do take care of us, so well, quit at once? What do you do? Do you keep doing the same thing you have been doing?
- Are you ready going to slice up that βoctopusβ today?
- Are you ready going to work without pay?
- Are you growing?
Well this is not a blog post like the others, it is very deep and makes you think so I thank you for enlightening us with this topic!
ππ you are welcome!!!
Very in-depth post. Things have progressed over the years, but definitely can keep progressing. It definitely depends on where you live in the world. I would like to see every country value the choice to work or not work and stay at home with the kids, without it being some sort of a stigma. Some women love to be “stay at home moms,” others want to work. And both decisions should be available without limitations. While that is generally the case here in the US, things can always improve wherever you live.
ππ thank you!!!
Wow, I learned so much from this post. Thank you so much for sharing this information. I donβt think I could be a stay-at-home mom simply because I donβt want to have children. But this post has given me a lot to think about.
ππ you are welcome, Iris!
This is one of your best posts yet. The economies of so many countries are built on the backs of laborers and other “menial laborers”, but without them the economy can’t function. Unfortunately, the catch 22 is that those workers can’t afford to live if they all walk off and leave the economy in the lurch. Big money will be fine until the “lowly” are forced to return.
ππ thank you, Ben!
This is the best article I read on your blog so far! It’s bringing in all the struggle of people, all the inequality that exist everywhere not just there. A lot to think of really.
πππ
A lot to think about. We need to work together to end the gap and evolve into an equal world. Some countries have it more difficult than others, but still it is a big cultural work that needs to be done, and I believe we can do it.
ππ thank you.
I love reading posts like these that really make you think and appreciate what you have. It’s interesting learning more about different set in gender roles.
Kileen
cute & little
ππ thank you.
One of the great and interesting post that I read today and every words that you’ve said here make us think a lot for the things that we can help to have a better life or a better world.
ππ I am glad to hear this!
Being a child of immigrant parents, I can understand the differences of cultural norms and lifestyle compared to western living. Making ends meet is simply more tough!
ππ it simply shouldn’t be happening!!!
Making ends meet is always an issue especially for developing countries. We need stable job for future security.
ππ
This is such an interesting post and I can do relate to it! In current situation, it is so important for couples to work and save for the rainy day. Gender rules need to change and it will definitely change!
πππ
This is an excellent article! And unfortunately still true around the world, even in America. Wpmen dedicate their whole life to their household, husband, and children. Then when that does not work out it is too late to begin a career or the resources are no longer there. I think the best chance women have is to find their own success rather than trying to work for others. It is still very difficult but possible.
πππ
Wow this is one of the deepest blogs I ever read on your site. Thank you for this and this has to be resolved
ππ you are welcome.
AHHH its a voice of hundereds of women , you are great .
Around the world its become trend and women at the end again disrespectfull.
Our world one day destroy .
Thank you so much for this post .
ππππ
This is such a powerful post. If more workers banded together like this, the world would be a different place. Workers are the lifeblood of all economies.
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Both of my grown boys are so good to their families. They do just as much work as the ladies and are very hands-on fathers. I’m so very proud of them both. My daughter is not so lucky. Her fella wasn’t taught the importance of pitching in, or working… so, I’ll just stop right there, since she’s not happy with that, but loves him enough to hope he’ll change. I’ll just hope she’s right. Thankfully her job treats her decent and it’s pulling them all through. Knock on wood.
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This really does make you take a step back and think. Gener roles are slowly starting to change although women still seem to have the larger chunk of responsibilities in many cultures.
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I do believe it is a little unfair to expect women to do everything for their families. I am in the same dilemma. I do housework, cook meals, run errands, take care of the family’s needs and still do online freelance work. At the end of the day, I am so exhausted! I wish I knew the right words to say so that I could let my family know that I am not a robot and I am not their maid.
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I would like to see every country value the choice to work or not work and stay at home with the kids, without a stigma. I work from home and continue to upkeep our home. My husband always says he could never afford me if he had to pay for all that I do.
πππ heβs so right!
This is such an incredible and informative post. I had no idea this was anyones reality. Wow.
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I can’t say I’ve ever been in a position like this myself, but I do understand what you mean! It’s important that we give people opportunities that benefit them as well.
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This is interesting but I did voluntary work. I did the housework as well. And I think you can count that as unpaid work.
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What an interesting topic… I have never thought about this before. I really enjoyed reading your post.
Aaaahhhh…I am glad you did, Michele!
I really loe this! Such an eye opening post.
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This is an in-depth and interesting post. I learned a lot from this. Thanks for sharing.
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