A couple where one partner carries a pile of household chores while the other relaxes, emphasising how unequal effort can create imbalance in a relationship. Illustration by the Author.
The 2022 study “Gender Inequities in Household Labour Predict Lower Sexual Desire in Women Partnered with Men” by Harris, Gormezano, and van Anders looked at something that’s often noticed but not always studied: how the balance of household work can shape desire. They surveyed women living with male partners and young children, asking about who did which chores, whether the division felt fair, how dependent their partner seemed, and their own sexual desire. What they found wasn’t entirely surprising, though still telling: women who took on more of the housework tended to report lower sexual desire for their partners. Part of that seemed tied to seeing the partner as dependent, almost like a subtle shift from equal partner to someone needing care, and to a lesser extent, feeling the chores were unfair. It’s interesting, the way everyday routines and responsibilities can quietly reshape relationships, how small imbalances can ripple into intimacy. The study is a snapshot, focused on Western women with children, so it doesn’t tell the whole story, and causation isn’t clear, but it does suggest that the way chores are divided matters more than we might think, not just for fairness, but for closeness too.
Reference:
Harris, E. A., Gormezano, A., & van Anders, S. M. (2022). Gender inequities in household labour predict lower sexual desire in women partnered with men. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 51(8), 3797–3812. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-022-02397-2