Women who do not cook for men each day have a happier marriage

A 15-year study of Harvard has pointed out that sharing domestic affairs has an important impact on the happiness of marriage. The study, which has attended 12,000 couples, has revealed that women who do not cook daily for their husbands have valued marriage by 8.4/10, while those who cook each day have [...]
The study, which has attended 12,000 couples, has found that women who don't cook for their husbands every day have praised their marriage by 8.4/10, while those that cook each day have estimated it by just 6.1/10.
Why is that? Daily cooking often puts women in a servant role, making her feel that she should be “named” her place in relations instead of being an equal partner.
This phenomenon has an impact not only on women but also on men who are happier when cooking is divided, praising marriage by 8.1/10 compared to 5.9/10 when there are those who [ “are served” continually.
The happiest couples are those who share household chores, cooking together, taking shifts, or simply ordering food. Cooking and sharing of tasks are no longer a matter of tradition, but a way to avoid double burden, especially when women are also employed abroad.
Finally, the study points out that equality in relationships is the key to a healthy and happy marriage.











