A minority struggles as theĀ blame game heats upĀ at homeā¦
This isnāt a cry for help.Ā Rather, itās recognition that abuse can creep up on even the most vigilant of us. Perhaps itās because no one thinks it can happen to them. Perhaps itās unwillingness to face the hard truth or because the escalation is so subtle, so insidious, that it slips by unnoticed. In my case, it took 34 years of marriage to realise that I had become what I feared most: the default suspect.
It may have something to do with the fact that, aside from our noble Swiss Shepherd, Gatsby, Iām the last remaining male in the house. Our four sons have flown the coop, married off and are thriving, leaving Gatsby and me alone, holding the line for masculinity in a household now thoroughly reclaimed by the oestrogen army.
The consequences have been⦠dire.
The lamb disappearing off the kitchen counter? Clearly my fault.
Tennis balls strategically positioned for someone to trip over? Obviously Gatsby, or me, by extension.
Doors left open during a cold snap? If you guessed me, youād be correct.
Missing Tupperware lids? That oneās still under investigation, but Iām currently out on bail.
The situation became so absurd that I decided to implement a star chart. A simple system: every time Iām unfairly blamed or subjected to a tone that would make a prison warden flinch, I give myself a star. Five stars earns me a gift, perhaps a chocolate, a short nap or the sheer thrill of closing a cupboard without comment.
By lunchtime, I had amassed 13 stars. And no one had even been home. I was being blamed via WhatsApp, Post-It notes and the ghost of accusations yet to come. At this rate, Iād need to dip into retirement savings just to keep up with the gifts. Clearly, the system needed recalibrating or I needed to move, along with Gatsby, into a kennel for some peace.
Now, I should be clear: Iām not without fault. Iāve left the milk and butter out. Iāve neglected to pick wet towels up off the floor. Iāve adjusted the air conditioner settings without written consent. But surely a man must be able to age with dignity?
This isnāt the home I envisioned. I thought Iād be spending my empty-nest years tweeting aggressive things in quiet contemplation, occasionally offering sage advice to my children over Sunday lunch. Instead, Iām apologising to house plants, hiding in the laundry with a Toblerone and negotiating a peace treaty with the dog over shared blame for muddy pawprints.
Still, hope remains in what has to be a triumph of optimism over experience.
Iāve recently applied for minority status within the household and am lobbying for male representation in household decisions. Gatsby has been nominated as my running mate. Weāre campaigning on a platform of āNot Always Our Faultā and āLet the Dog Speakā.
If you see me wandering your neighbourhood, clutching a star chart and muttering about oven mittens, donāt worry, Iām fine. Just know that abuse wears many faces and, sometimes, one of them is holding a wooden spoon and asking, āWho left this on the counter?ā
Text |Ā Howard FeldmanĀ
Photography |Ā Eric Isselee
Follow Howard Feldman on X: @HowardFeldman
