Financial Feminist - 110. Building Equitable Relationships with Eve Rodsky (Fair Play)
Episode Date: August 29, 2023What is the Second Shift? And how is it harming women? The second shift is defined as labor performed in the home outside of work –– things like grocery shopping or prepping dinner or lunches, chi...ldcare, pet care, cleaning, and managing finances –– which mostly falls on women. Today’s guest, Eve Rodsky, is here to help partners build more equitable relationships by helping bridge communication gaps and develop better systems in the home. In this episode, she talks through her Fair Play Doctrine, offering exercises and conversation starters for couples to help get started in eradicating the labor disparity in their homes. Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/start-here-financial-feminist-podcast Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The most interesting thing about that invisible work, Tori, was that she argued you can never
make it visible because if you make it visible, then all of society collapses because we're
doing hundreds, millions of hours of unpaid labor, women are, that have become the social
safety net of our country.
Hi, financial feminists.
Welcome back to the show.
Hello, hello.
I hope you're having a lovely week.
I hope as summer nears a close, you are, I think I've already said this on the show,
but go out and do something fun. Touch some grass, pick some berries. I don't know,
do some summer activities. I still got to swim in the lake. That's always my goal in the summer is
get my butt in the lake. And if I got in my butt in a lake, I can officially be happy with my
summer. So I just hope you're soaking up this last bit and also staying cool and dry. Okay.
Today's episode. We have talked a lot on the show and just a lot in feminist circles about
the emotional labor of women and also about how the economy is firmly on the backs of women.
And I think we know this more than ever this summer with Barbie and Taylor Swift and Beyonce
literally saving the economy. So in our buying power, the things that we choose to support and
give our money to, but also in the unpaid emotional labor, which is often called second shift labor.
Second shift labor is defined as labor performed in the home outside of work, right? Our previous
guest, Tiffany Dufu, would label this as non-compensated work, right? We're thinking
about grocery shopping, prepping lunches or dinners, childcare, pet care, cleaning, managing finances, taking care of ailing family members. These tasks, of course, mostly fall on women.
And I think it's so important to not only talk about with your fellow women,
our podcast is 95% women listenership, but it's very important to have these conversations with the men in your
life. So please share this episode because our guest has literally made that her entire
ethos and the mission of her work. Eve Rodsky transformed a blueberry's breakdown
into a catalyst for social change when she applied her Harvard-trained background
in organizational management
to ask the simple yet profound question,
what would happen if we treated our homes
as our most important organizations?
Her New York Times bestselling
and Reese's Book Club pick, Fair Play,
a gamified life management system
that helps partners rebalance their domestic workload
and reimagine their relationship has elevated the cultural conversation about the value of
unpaid labor and care. Speaking as someone who is now diving into her whole system of fair play,
it is so transformative in a way that doesn't feel naggy or blaming or men, how could you do this? It's
truly just, it's really incredible. In her highly anticipated follow-up,
Find Your Unicorn Space, Reclaim Your Creative Life in a Too Busy World,
Rodsky explores the cross-section between the science of creativity, productivity,
and resilience. Described as the antidote to physical, mental, and emotional
burnout, Rodsky aims to inspire a new narrative around the equality of time and the individual
right to personal time choice that influences sustainable and lasting change on a policy level.
Usually I give you like some stats here, but honestly, we get into those and so much more
in this episode. Not only was this just eye-opening for me when it comes to the true division of labor in the home
and how that affects women mentally and financially, but it is incredibly actionable.
You can literally take parts of this episode and apply them in your relationship.
So I always encourage you to share this show.
But especially this episode, if you are in a partnership, especially a partnership
with a man, this is a great show as you're going on a drive, as you're like working around the
house together, listen to this episode together and use it as a beautiful transition into a
hopefully non-confrontational, but really like use it as an invitation to have a conversation to make this
a change in your relationship and in your life that benefits both of you. This episode is for
anyone who has or wants kids, lives with a partner, wants to live with a partner. Basically,
if you're in any way planning to share your home or life with someone,
this episode is for you. So let's go ahead and get into it.
But first, a word from the companies that allow us to bring you all of this good free content. oh yeah this is wallpaper i love it i i have an interesting relationship with wallpaper because
i grew up with like the bad wallpaper that spent you know hours taking off totally i. Yes, yes. I was so averse to wallpaper for that exact reason. We had this very,
very small kitchen in my side. I was in town apartment in the Lower East Side. And for some
reason, I had striped brown wallpaper that sort of looked like it was like toilet paper that
someone had wiped themselves on. Oh, that's a visual. So that's really what it looked like. Yeah, it just was like splotchy
with white and brown. So yeah, so I've had to reclaim the wallpaper narrative.
I have seen so much cool wallpaper now where I'm like, and I rent too. So I'm like, Oh,
I know there's wallpaper that you can take down. But I know, I I know. You know what's worth it? Just do one wall.
You wanna hear the cool,
one last cool wallpaper story
is that when I was setting up my office,
I found this wallpaper of this really cool
sort of enchanted forest, sage green wallpaper
that has a lot of white horses.
And so then what we decided like for,
if Tori, you came to LA,
what I would do is invite you over to the office.
And we've kept a gold Sharpie.
And so we've asked everybody who has a book that's been published, who's an author, to create a little unicorn horn on one of these white horses and then sign the unicorn.
So you sort of get your own unicorn.
It's like, you know, you get your own star.
That's so sweet.
It's the wallpaper author walk of fame.
Exactly. Yeah. So that's what we created a wallpaper author walk of fame.
I love that. That's so sweet. We're so excited to have you so excited to talk to you about your
work. What brought you into the work of Fair Play? And can you talk a little bit about your
experience feeling like quote, a married single woman? Yeah, I think Tori sort of like you, you know, you probably look back on your life. And
for me, whether it's financial feminist, for me, it was, you know, I did not set out to be an expert
on the gender division of labor, right? I mean, I'm sure I can put words in your mouth,
you probably feel the same way. But on our third grade, what do you want to be when you grow up bored? I'm sure did not say financial feminist or expert on the
gender division of labor, right? Five years ago, you would ask me five years ago, this was not part
of the plan. So yep, totally. And of course, you know, the expertise that you have, and that I
gained over the years is, is the anchor to the plan. But as you said, it's not part of the plan. I mean,
in my third grade, what do you want to be when you grow up bored? I probably said like astronaut.
And then interestingly, since I'm resolutely Gen X, I remember Elizabeth Warren. She was in law
school. She was our orientation teacher. And she asked us what we want to do with our law degree.
And a lot of people, you know, focus on
justice and litigation or arguing before the Supreme Court. But I legitimately think I said
something like I was going to be president of the United States, and a senator from New York,
and continue to be a Nick City dancer, because that's like, that was like my goal also at the
time to become a professional dancer. And so I think given, you know, sort of
also your audience too, or if I'm speaking to millennials or any Gen Z women, what I want to
say is that I had really big dreams. I had big dreams. And I thought I'd be smashing all of these,
you know, ceilings, whether it was president, like I said, Senator, Nick City dancer, but
really, the only thing I can tell you, Tori, that I was smashing, you know, 10 years
after that Elizabeth Warren orientation was like peas for my toddler, Zach.
And in that 10 years, from 21 to 34, so I guess 13 years, my life had taken such a turn
for the worse in terms of my career stalling after my second son was born.
My husband abandoning me, thinking that I was, I talk about the blueberries breakdown where he sends me a text, I'm surprised you didn't get blueberries.
He was looking at me as the fulfiller of his smoothie needs and realizing that by the time my second son, Ben, was born in 2011, that all of those big dreams looked like
they had all passed me by. I just took a huge sigh. Talk to me about that. Was it a feeling
of identity loss for you? Was it? We've talked a lot on the show about this like myth, of course,
that women can have it all. And then you try to have it all and you realize like you can't have
it all like what and you mentioned this blueberries moment.
Like talk to me more about that.
What was the shift for you?
I think the shift for me at that point, and a lot of people say we like to go dark to
go light.
So we'll go, we'll stay in the pain for a little bit.
And then I promise you this will get light.
But I think to stay in the dark for a little bit, because I think it's important because
I am a ghost of your Christmas future out there, you know, and that's what the financial feminist is as well, right? I
mean, you are teaching toward what I was listening to you on one of your episodes, right? The beauty
of what you're saying, which is so similar to fair play is like, yes, there may be life changing
magic and organizing your junk drawer. But the real life changing magic is a long term planning.
And so that's, I think, where our messages really intersect beautifully. So for me,
I did not have any of that long term planning all along the way in my life. I had this idea
that three words would get me through and those are really toxic words. And those words are figure
it out. And if you're saying to yourself, I'm going to figure it out, then that is not where
I want you. I want you to read The Financial Feminist.
I want you to read Fair Play.
There is beauty in not figuring it out.
There is beauty in long-term thinking and understanding and being able to plan.
Because I didn't do that, what ended up happening was because I didn't have any tools.
Remember, this is 2011 when I had this blueberries breakdown where my husband, Seth, sends me
this, I'm surprised you didn't get blueberries texts. And I'm sitting on the side
of the road about to pick up my son from his toddler transition program with a breast pump
and a diaper bag on the passenger seat of my car, gifts for a newborn baby to return,
and a client contract in my lap because I had actually been pushed out of the corporate workforce
around that time after my second maternity leave. So all this isolation and abandonment, that was the feeling. And in fact,
Tori, now, you know, all these years later, 12 years later, the word cloud of women in midlife,
which is why I wrote Fair Play and my subsequent book, Find Your Unicorn Space,
was that the word cloud that kept coming up that was highly troubling to me was that
women feel a combination of overwhelm and erasure. Now that's a terrible combination. If you're going
to be erased, at least like be erased with a tequila in like a Caribbean destination, you know,
if you're going to be like, bye bye, like I'm gone. Or if you're going to feel overwhelmed,
at least let it be towards something where you feel like you're changing the world. But to have overwhelm and erasure together,
it's a really, really toxic combination. And typically, like I said, when I got to the
realization that I was not smashing my dreams or those gas ceilings, but that I was really
smashing just peas, it was a combination of understanding that I had let assumptions about
my life as opposed to structured decision making take over. And so I was now in charge of everything
for my family, which I didn't know was statistically happening to all women in every country. In fact,
it's a UN sustainability goal that we have to eradicate the fact that women hold $1.9 trillion
of unpaid labor a year. So that
was happening in my marriage where I became the default parent, or as I call the she-fault parent,
even though it can happen to people who are not married to men too. And then on top of it,
my workplace had abandoned me, as I said to you, where they told me if I was going to come back
for maternity leave, it would be without my direct reports. And I'd have to pump in a dark,
basically a dark broom closet. And they said there was no outlet in that broom closet. So I'd have to
bring a battery pack for that breast pump. So I quit. Now I say I'm forced out. And by the way,
think about how this is affecting my financial life. By the way, I just lost my 401k. I lost my
possibility for promotion. I'm now doing all the unpaid labor, which of course is harder to get
back into the workplace. So this is affecting my financial life as we're talking, not realizing at the time.
And then on top of that, our society, because we don't have any federal paid leave and help with
childcare, our society tells us to wait till our kids are in school. And then you can begin sort
of your second phase of your life. But I remember when my son entered school,
the preschool teacher who I loved and invited us into, you know, parents day, told us all that this was our new community. These were the people we could rely on who would know us better than anyone
ever knew us, Tori. And then I looked down at my name tag, and it says Zach's mom. And so then I
thought to myself, these are the people who are going to know me better than anyone's ever known me. They don't even know my fucking name. So it was a combination
of that erasure that all of a sudden I was Zach's mom, plus the fact that I was being abandoned by
my workplace, plus the fact that my partner was saying me is that she fault. That was the perfect
storm that ultimately led to Fair Play. Okay, I have a million other questions for you.
I have to ask the one that is on my mind immediately. I need you to either talk me
off the ledge or push me off. Is the answer don't have children? It's one of the answers for sure.
Yeah, because I very candidly in my life, I am not ready to have children at this moment. But
I am having the conversation of do I want this someday and part of me is like maybe maybe and the other part of me like hell no and
then I hear something like this and I'm like hell no so like I don't know what my question is
basically I don't know is it is that don't have children well it's for you yes well I think again
this is why I love I'm so excited to be with you today, because, again, as the ghost of your Christmas future, it can be like the Christmas carol.
You know what? We're going to do things differently. Ebenezer Scrooge, you know, he's going to do things differently.
If the fair play movement, you know, continues to take hold, you can have children.
But this is the thing, right? There's two things that it's going to
require. It requires us as a society to remember that an hour holding our child's hand in the
pediatrician's office is as valuable as an hour in the boardroom. That's it. And because we're
not there yet. And it's also work. It is as much work to give a presentation in a boardroom as it
is to handle a screaming toddler. Like I would, screaming toddlers way, way harder. Yes, way harder, way harder, right? It is work. And so,
and then the other thing I think is important is to remember that it can be worth it if you are
interested. And by the way, this happens in same-sex couples too, but if you're interested
in partnering with a man, it can be worth it if, if, and only if we're inviting that man into his full power in the home
so that you, Tori, can stay out and you're full power in the world.
That is the only way that I will allow you to have children.
Totally.
Or, you know, again, look, there's a lot of single parents out there. Let me shout out my mother,
who is a single mother. She was not a single mother by choice. My father left her with my brother when she was pregnant with my brother, and he ended
up having a lot of issues because of that. Why I need your listeners to become part of this culture
movement is so then I can make things better for the people who don't have the privilege of having
a partner, right? To have the federal paid leave, to get us universal child care, to get support
systems back in place, to fight in the family law courts, to get us universal child care, to get support systems back in place,
to fight in the family law courts, where I've testified twice now for women, single mothers,
whose partner says, what do you do all day? You're eating bonbons all day. I'm not going
to pay child support. And I literally read all of the fair play tasks. And we'll talk about those
into the record. So what I will say to you is absolutely, you can have children. And there's
a secret formula. And this is where we can get into the fun part of sort of how the system came about.
But these are the three things I'm going to need from you to remember if and when you
want to have children.
We're going to practice and we're going to have you ready in a pattern of a secret formula.
And the practice is boundaries, systems, and communication. When you have somebody in your
life, or if you want to partner with somebody in your life and have children with them, and you're
lucky, again, to have the privilege of a partner, then those are the three things that we have found,
again, through 13 years now, 12 years now of beta testing Fair Play, having it being in 17 countries,
12 years now of beta testing fair play, having it being in 17 countries, having hundreds of thousands of people play, probably millions at this point, we know that that's the secret formula,
boundaries, systems and communication. And of course, we can break it down. And we will. But
I will tell you, yes, you can have them. And I promise you, when you practice that formula,
things will be okay. So let's dive into that. This is a perfect opportunity. So I know what all of those
things mean in theory, right? I think I'm a pretty good communicator. I'm getting better
at setting boundaries. I think especially for systems in my life before anybody else has
touched them, great. I feel really good about that. Managing that with a partner
in the anticipation of having children or at least having a equitable
relationship before or in spite of children what does that actually look like in practice well
i'll tell you a little bit of an origin story because for me for a long time tori i thought
it looked like a list because women have been making lists you know for hundreds of years right
eve that's funny you say that because that's what i'm asking right right yeah i'm like what is the because women have been making lists, you know, for hundreds of years, right?
Eve, that's funny you say that, because that's what I'm asking.
I'm like, what is the to do's? What what sort of things do I need? What are the hacks?
You've like, what are the hacks, baby?
Exactly. The hacks, right? It was sort of like a hack. And so I remember looking when I was at my lowest with Seth. And then also I talk about in the book and Fair Play, just these powerful women, Tori,
that look like you, these amazing women who are so empowered in using their voice, literally
having lost their voice to their partners.
It was just starting to, it was the wake up call to realize this was happening to other
women.
I talk about a March that I go on, a breast cancer March where at noon, these powerful
women won't come with me to lunch because their partners are texting them things like where did you put Hudson
soccer bag? And what's the address to the birthday party? And when are you coming home from the
parade? Or my favorite was my friend Kate, Kate's husband that asked her do the kids need to eat
lunch. But I think what was so hard about you know,, these moments in my life where I was watching these
powerful women cede to this pressure of not saying, oh, I'm turning off my phone.
But Eve, I can't go with you to lunch after this breast cancer march because I have to
go bring a perfectly wrapped gift to a birthday party.
I have to go find Hudson's soccer bag or feed my kids lunch.
It was this realization that in a good way, Tori, because this was 2011, right? This was 2012.
Like, I think literally, we just had gotten iPads. I think that that was like the first I think that
was the first year of Instagram launching. So there was no Tori to tell me my life could look
differently. There was no tick tock, there was nothing there was just how to expect when you're
expecting, which told me my child was going to look like a jelly bean. But I had no idea what to expect. And so when I realized my life is falling
apart, and then I noticed these women who were so powerful, and I saw that they didn't have power in
their relationships, too. My first thing to do, like any Gen X type A woman was to go to the
literature. Because that's sort of what I was looking for. So there was no such thing as organization for the home. If you looked it up in 2011 on Amazon or in the library, you found like
bins, you know, like how to put stuff in bins or whatever. It was like the early phases before
Marie Kondo of how to organize your home. That's not what I was looking for. I was looking for like
an organizational system to take the assumptions off me and start putting some work onto Seth. Or as my one friend said,
what Fairplay taught her was that she doesn't have a magical vagina that whispers in her ear
what her husband's mother wants for Christmas. So those assumptions, I was trying to move them over
so that I didn't have a magical vagina, but that Seth understood he could capably do the work of
the home as well. So there was nothing like that out there. But I did find out, Tori, that this thing that I was suffering with,
and that Kate, you know, do the kids DTE lunch was suffering with, and all those women that day
were suffering with has a name. So it turns out it's been called the second shift. It's been
called emotional labor. It's been called the mental load but my favorite
favorite favorite article was actually one i found from 1986 tori same shit different decade again
we're gonna get light i promise but the article in 1986 and this gets i think this is important
for the financial feminists because it's a lot of what you talk about.
In 1986, Arlene Kaplan Daniels argued that men own most things in this country.
The ownership, the financial power, political power, which comes from financial power, stays with men.
And the more that women enter the workplace, the more that we could possibly get some of
that financial power.
So it's very much in the interest of patriarchal
systems. And again, I'm not blaming individual men. We're all in the system that works for none
of us. But it's very much in the interest of patriarchal systems to keep women in the home.
And if you're not going to be in the home, so God forbid women have to enter the workplace,
which they do because of income inequality, and we have entered the workplace,
we're still going to make sure that they get saddled with a motherhood penalty.
We're going to give them the assumption that they will be the ones taking care of kids. And so what
we can do with that is we can ask them to do more flexible work, the non-promotable tasks
of the emotional labor of talking and mentoring people, writing the newsletters, we can pay them less.
And so this all really does affect our finances.
But the most interesting thing about that invisible work,
Tori, was that she argued you can never make it visible
because if you make it visible,
then all of society collapses
because we're doing hundreds, millions of hours
of unpaid labor, women are, that have become the social safety net of our country.
So once that happened, I had this aha moment.
And it was very much like a too-big-for-my-britches moment, where somehow I thought I could solve all this myself.
Duh, it's not that hard.
By just making invisible work visible.
I thought, wow, no one's ever done this. So how fun would it be if I could open up an Excel sheet
and just write down every single thing that I do that takes more than two minutes that's work,
as you said earlier about the pediatrician's office. So over nine months, this is what saved me.
What saved me is I found women like you, Tori.
And I did it through snowball research
because back then, again,
it was harder to find surveys you could use.
There was not AI.
So I did it through early Facebook, asking for women.
Ultimately, I married the US census
and then I ended up in 17 countries over the last 10 years.
But we found out what every woman does that takes more than two minutes,
from applying sunscreen, which is two minutes for the application, 30 minutes from the chase,
Girl Scout cookies ordering in sales, making school lunches, planning birthday celebrations,
being that magical vagina that buys gifts for in-laws at Christmas,
planning holidays. And ultimately, I ended up with a 98-tab Excel spreadsheet, 2,000 items of invisible work that I ultimately titled the Should I Do spreadsheet. And that, I will say,
that did not end up solving my problems because when I sent it to Seth with no context, just can't
wait to discuss, I got no response from him except for a monkey emoji covering its
eyes, like the early pixelated version of like, I don't want to fucking see this.
But I will say why it saved me because it was the first time in my life, in this phase
of my life that was so, so hard that I realized I wasn't alone.
And that was the first step.
So it was the step one for me
was making the invisible visible and then crashing and burning when I realized I had a community of
women. But that that list, which is I still today will tell you is the best list of invisible work
ever created. And it's now in the fair play cards. It's on our website. We'll talk about
where you can find it because you never have to do it again. But that list alone was not enough.
And that's when I crashed and burned, Tori, because after nine months of this project,
I thought just by showing Seth everything I was doing, that would be enough.
But again, that's not boundary systems and communication.
That's a list.
And so I had to learn the hard way that that was not going to be enough.
OK, so let's take that second step, because I'm wondering your friend kate like do the kids need to eat the fuck they do like
obviously you fucking idiot of course they need to eat like what is your response to that in a way
that one is not like you're fucking idiot oh no duh well that's what i said yes for many years
total it's it's i'm trying to figure out like,
what is the mature response to that that can actually lead to some sort of change,
just in your relationship, right? This larger conversation that will of course have right,
it has to come with policy change, it has to come with, you know, paid paid leave,
and it has to come with abortion access, and it has to come with all of these things, right?
But at the very microcosm, like in our relationships, how do you start having that conversation, especially if you're dating a
man to the point where they understand and start doing something about it?
Okay, well, that is the key, right? Because as we say, especially as activists, you have to breathe,
it's polluted air out there, but you still have to breathe, right? So we're going to take agency
in our own home. And that's where actually Fair Play started. I was pretty surprised by myself because my mother's a
professor of social change. And so I always thought actually I was going to start inside out,
like, you know, paid leave first and childcare first, but I was actually surprised. And actually
it should not have surprised me because what I do for a living, my day job, Tori, is that I work for
families that look like the HBO show
Succession. You and I should talk because I am obsessed with Succession. I get compared to
Shiv Roy on the internet multiple times a day. Oh, my God. Well, you sort of look like her,
by the way. That's what people tell me. And I'm not even made up. When I have makeup on,
we have the same face shape, Sarah Snook and I. More than that, you have the most,
like those beautiful eyes. You look a lot like her.
Yes.
But it is something literally on the daily.
And I'm like, part of me is like, I'm very flattered.
And the other part of me is like, that's who I remind you.
Anyway.
But by the way, why not?
Right.
I mean, again, she's a I call her daughter of or son of.
But I'd rather you be the matriarch, you know.
But what's been interesting about that work that I was doing at the time, right, because
I was telling you that I quit my job or I was forced out and I ended up starting my own law firm, which I still have.
And that's been hard to sort of transition those succession clients over to other people. as you said, grace and humor and generosity communication, as opposed to fuck you as you
hear the way sort of Kendall Roy talks to his kids or not Kendall, Logan Roy, which is very true,
by the way. So families will work with me where like the, you know, Logan Roy will walk out of
the room whenever his son speaks, right to the point where we're talking and communicating as a
family with grace and humor and generosity over the most complex financial decisions for family foundations and family businesses.
That's my niche. That's what I do for a living as a lawyer. And so I had a point, Tori,
when Seth sent me back the pixelated, I don't want to see the should I do spreadsheet.
I had a choice. There was the eat, pray, love narrative, which was very big back then.
So I could get, but that's a privileged narrative, right? I mean, I had two kids at the time.
So I wasn't doing that. I wasn't going to eat, pray, love it out of my marriage.
So I could either resign myself to doing it all, like you said, and just end up being that
fucking muttering person that I had become like, you fucking do it. You know, I can't fucking
handle this. Like I'm storming out.
Like who doesn't know how to fucking, you know, change a crib sheet.
Like just that's sort of where I was in this nails on a chalkboard communication style.
And Seth's communication style at that point was avoidance.
I know this because I actually I'm trained in communication styles.
That's the biggest irony of all.
So I could resign myself to doing it all.
Or, Tori, I could get my ass in gear
and become my own client.
And so that's what I did.
And so I put that formula,
which I knew was a practice on the board,
the same fucking formula I use for all my families.
I use it for myself.
I put two things on a whiteboard.
And again, this wasn't supposed to be a book
or a movement or anything.
This was just me helping Seth and me
because I needed to get out of this pattern of my
relationship.
And so the two things I wrote on that whiteboard was boundaries, as I said, systems and
communication.
And then I wrote home equals organization because I realized that that was the missing
piece, that people don't treat their homes as if it's their most important organization.
Tori, even my Aunt Marion's Mahjong group has more clearly defined expectations in the home.
You don't bring snack to her fucking group twice.
You get one warning sign.
If you don't bring snack for the second time, you're out.
But the home, men especially, were telling me that it's a shit
show. It's decision fatigue. They're waiting to decide who's taking the dog out, right? When it's
about to take a piss on the rug. And that was a man who works in systems management, ironically,
and doesn't have kids yet. And he's telling me his home feels horrible to him already. And he's,
they're just married without kids. So I knew I was onto something because I knew that systems, boundaries and communications, allow organizations to thrive. Now, the problem
was, how was I going to, where was it going to start, first of all, and how was I going to develop
what I wanted to develop that you said will go from saying, fuck you, your resentment, the
bitterness, the muttering, to like sort of like
Us Weekly, like those buzz-o-meters, like we're resent-o-meters at 10. Like I was at 10 Bs.
So how do you move out of patterns? So typically, people probably like us would start with the
easiest thing of boundary systems communication. And the easiest thing of those is systems.
It's the easiest place to start. It doesn't mean you end there. Because we'll talk about how important boundaries and
communication are to implementing a system. But the beauty of a system is that I knew I could
get men on board. Because my early beta testers were men who were in the military, who are coaches,
who know they're not going to put their point guard in for their center, unless it's like
LeBron James or something. And so I started with systems.
But the problem with a system, to develop a system, you need accurate data.
And we've now learned, and I didn't know this was actually in science that had been studied,
but I found in my own study, too, that men over-report by at least one-third what they do,
and women under-report by two-thirds.
So I was getting very inaccurate data.
I would say, who's doing groceries in your house?
We both do.
Who's planning birthday celebrations for your kid?
We both are.
Who does dishes?
We both do.
And I'm like, what is happening here?
Can I understand what is really happening in these households?
Women who are married to men or wanted to be partnered with them, Tori.
And this is how we can solve for this, why you can't have children.
Because when you solve for this, it changes everything.
Women were the one telling me that, oh, we both do groceries because I'm the one that notices our second son, Johnny, likes yellow mustard with his
protein. Otherwise, he chokes on it. He won't eat it. Ooh, okay. If I'm in my HBO show Succession
World and we're looking at how to put together governance, we call that conception. That's a
conception phase of project management. Then I would hear, oh yeah, and I'm the one who gets
stakeholder buy-in for what everybody else needs for the grocery list. They didn't say stakeholder
buy-in, but that's what I was listening for. And then I monitor the mustard for when it runs low.
Ooh, okay. That's planning. I know that phase. Oh, you both do it because Sean goes to the store to pick up the mustard.
The French is yellow and he brings home spicy Dijon every fucking time.
And now you can't trust him with your living will.
Ding, ding, ding.
That was the most important insight in this whole Fair Play journey,
because then I could write the two
words that were missing from this organization, that was missing from literally almost every
single home organization that I spoke to in the past 10 years in 17 countries. And those two words
are accountability and trust. If you lose accountability and trust in an organization,
you're done. You are done.
You will be governed by fear, by resentment, all those things we were talking about.
You restore accountability and trust, like you were saying, to get out of that pattern, those communication patterns you're talking about, by ownership, by context and not control.
And so that conception, planning, and execution insight, when you apply that to the Fair Play
Excel spreadsheet, which was the should I do spreadsheet at the time, I started to write
them on index cards.
And I realized you can have an amazing metaphor for holding cards because I wanted people
to understand that when they hold the groceries card, they're not going to say, hey, get me
the list.
What do you want me to do there?
I'll call you with a FaceTime when I get there.
Nope, nope, nope.
Just like I don't work for Tori. There's no way Amazing Kristen
is going into your office every day, Tori, and saying to you,
hey, Tori, so what do you want me to do today? I'm just going to wait here
till you tell me what to do, right? Yeah.
We know it doesn't work. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So when you bring that ownership mindset to the home, everything changes. And that is the core of the Fair Play
system. CPE, conception, planning, execution stays with one person. You can always redeal.
But once you do that in your relationship before kids, Tori, I'll let you have as many kids as you
want. That is really, really helpful. I know for myself and others listening, I hear that and I'm like,
okay, I'm going to start doing it. What happens if I receive friction? What happens if I,
especially from my male partner, receive the like, no, but I do a lot or like, oh yeah,
I'll try. And then it works for a while and then goes away. I also was thinking while you were
explaining, I understand that in order for
relationships to be the best that they can be, and if you have a problem, you need to communicate
that problem. At the same time, this feels like I am teaching men how to just be better people.
And that's not my responsibility. So how do you grapple with that too? Understanding this is
necessary to the
relationship and i also understand that unfortunately men have traditionally not
been conditioned to do this shit and also this is not my fucking job to be their mommy's teachers
whatever you want to call it a hundred percent and i think that that's but you know my mom and
i used to fight about this a lot when i was starting to think about fair play because
again she's a professor of social change right and she And she would say, well, don't you want to write
to men? And then we would sort of grapple back and forth with the fact that, you know, the oppressors
are typically the ones who have to change the systems, right? And so the oppressed are the
ones who have to change the systems. The thing about fair play is that it's a two-partner game.
It's a three-partner game. It's a three-partner game.
It's a four-partner game.
It's a societal game.
However, to enter the system, there has to be a game changer.
And typically, the game changer is the person who is not happy with the way things are.
And typically, it's going to be a woman because, again, sadly, that's what society has conditioned us to do, is to close our mouths and
to be seen and not heard. And so, yes, of course it's a burden. Of course it's a burden. The good
news, I think, is the collective burden is starting to lessen. We just saw this beautiful statistic
that actually men in white-collar jobs are the ones who are asking most now for paternity leave,
and they're reducing their hours more on average. That's the best demographic right now. There is something
happening, but yes, in our generation, in our liminal state, Tori, before the fair play,
unpaid labor conversation becomes completely baked into the culture, we have to be the ones taking on
the game changer role. And I will say that taking on that game changer role
was the best thing that ever happened to me in my life. Because yes, there was a lot of tension in
that beginning part. But the other option, like I told you, was to leave my marriage. And there was
going to be a lot of friction and teaching. And what I didn't want was what my mom did,
which was she had to remind my
father when his custody days were, and he didn't even show up for them, right? So fair play was
still not going to happen, even in a divorce setting. So for me, what I realize now is that
the key to my economic power and to my mental and physical health has been being in the boundary
systems and communication practice with my partner.
But to enter that practice for sure, it required me to say, I'm not going to live like this anymore.
And I want to just say one thing about that's because we did systems, or at least we got
to touch on systems.
And remember, this is a 101.
I mean, this is 10 years later.
This is a 101.
So for people who are hearing this for the first time and they feel triggered by it,
they should, right?
Because this is new ways of thinking.
But the ownership mindset made sense to Seth.
But the reason why it wasn't going to change, Tori, by just saying to Seth, here, extracurricular
sports, I love you, Seth.
You're awesome.
I'm so glad you think that you're handling extracurricular sports by bringing Zach, you know, to the little league field. But did you know that the conception means I'm
surveying his friends for what sports he wants to play, researching leagues. I'm on an 85 person
text chain for what, for what day practices and for commuting him to practice. Do you know that
I'm ordering equipment on Amazon and returning the equipment on Amazon? Do you know that I'm ordering equipment on Amazon and returning the equipment on Amazon?
Do you know that I'm retrieving his birth certificate
and scanning it into a 1985 portal
that has never been used before without crashing?
Do you know that I'm snack mom?
And so I'm required once a season
to bring snacks and water for 30 kids.
And also little Timmy has a peanut allergy
and I know that, so can't do peanut butter.
Yes, and a peanut allergy and then no peanut butter. This mom is vegan and, or this parent
is vegan. This child is, you know, it's, it's so complicated these days. And on top of it,
we do a coach's gift. So when Seth understood that, because from a workplace perspective,
he is very much an ownership mindset person. He understood, okay,
wow, that's a lot more work than just getting the kids in Little League field. So that's how we
started. We started with extracurricular sports because he valued it, I valued it. And Tori,
just from that one ownership change in our household, I was getting about six hours of my
week back of the hundred cards again fair plays
a hundred cards that represent everything you need to do to run a household 60 if you don't
have children you add 40 if you do so that's where the scariness of having children came up in our
beginning part of this podcast but I will say that that ownership piece that systems piece of saying
I will step off you as long as you handle the ownership with a decent minimum standard of care, which we can talk about, which means like sunscreen, water bottle,
and I don't care if they bring a uniform that's dirty, but just, you know, being on time.
That started to change our relationship by itself.
That was the systems.
But it wasn't enough because Tori, as you said, it requires somebody to be a game changer.
And it's really hard to be a game changer, Tori, when we've been
conditioned since birth to believe that our time is infinite like sand and that men's time is finite
like diamonds. So that's the boundary I'm talking about here. I'm not talking about a boundary like
shut off your phone after work. I'm talking about a boundary that's very different than you may have
ever heard. I'm talking about a boundary that you believe your time is as important as the men in your
life, as the men in your society.
And because we see things since literally since birth, we watch women enter male professions.
That's called occupational segregation.
Salaries automatically come down.
We watch health systems tell us that breastfeeding is free.
When it's 1800 hours a year, it's a full-time job. So again, that's one big, very, very practical
thing I'll say to you. One great thing about having kids is you do not have to breastfeed.
Now formula is amazing. It is, you know, it is an 1800 hour a year job. Not sure I believe it was
ever worth it for any of my kids. And I think it put us into a very bad pattern to start with.
So that's just an aside.
So what I'm telling you is that the game changer in my marriage with Seth wasn't,
you have to take on extra credit for sports, Tori.
It was, Seth, I see when we both get home from our workday,
that you have three hours after our kids go to bed to watch SportsCenter,
work out, check a PowerPoint deck.
Where I'm doing things in service of our home,
literally until my head hits the pillow, two hours after you go to bed.
I will no longer live that way.
We are a dual ambition household.
And I believe that I deserve as much time choice over how I use my day as you have.
Yes, I make less money than you, but my hours are just as important
as your hours. I want equal time choice. It doesn't have to be equal cards. That's why it's
called fair play, not equal play. But I need you to believe that my time is as valuable as your time.
And it took a long time, Tori, for him really to understand that. Because for a while he was
saying to me like, well, my time is more valuable than your time because I get paid more for my time. And so I have to keep saying, well, Seth, I'm talking about the
fact that we just both get 24 hours in a day. I only get 24 hours in a day. You only get 24 hours
in a day. And you believe because you get paid more money that I should have to be in service of
every single one of my hours should be in service
of somebody other than me. Well, and then I go to Okay, you make more money. Great. You're gonna
pay me for all of the domestic housekeeping or the caregiving. Exactly. You make more money
because you make more money. I do unpaid labor. I did unpaid labor. Right? Like, great. Okay,
then you need to pay me like you would
exactly for somebody to come over to clean the house for somebody to pick up the kids for somebody
to make okay you can hire a private chef you can hire a housekeeper you can hire a caregiver great
that'll i'll bill you but tori the hardest part about that in the fair play system which you'll
realize and what's so beautiful to have the cards and the, you know, the tools. And again, save all your money out there. You can find it
online at Fair Play Life for free. Well, we'll link it. Yeah, it's free. You can link in the
show notes. You don't have to buy anything. You can go and see them. But when you see the 100
tasks, what you realize is that there's about 50 tasks that are outsourceable because that was a
very, very common toxic message that Seth kept
saying to me. Well, if you're so overwhelmed, just get help. Help is with execution. You don't get
help with conception and planning, but even if you could get help with execution, which is fine,
there are still 50 cards, five, zero Tori that can't be outsourced, not any conception planning
or execution. And what I mean by that is as much as you love Alexia, she's not deciding whether your child's adenoids are being taken out.
As much as you love Alexia, she's not writing the handwritten Christmas card to your in-laws,
right? So there's about 50 cards. And you have to find a person you trust, right? The emotional
labor of doing that, of interviewing, of making sure if you background check them, if you're like
coordinating schedules with them. Oh, she can't make it this Friday. I need to find somebody else.
A hundred percent. Yes. And Child Care Helpers is a card in the Fair Play system that has about
30 subtasks because of all those things you talked about. So you can look online. That
alone has 30 subtasks. So the beauty of having that bigger conversation, Tori,
was that it wasn't I'm going to teach you to play this, be in the system or to learn ownership. It was that I'm not, I'm
getting time choice back and we're going to do it in an efficient way. And I'm going to step off you.
I'm going to step the fuck off you by stop. You know, I'm not going to be in the conception and
planning. I'm going to let you own meals. I'm going to let you own extracurricular sports,
but there will be mistakes along the way. But it required the courage to believe that my time was
diamonds. And I will just say four more things that your generation still says that's scaring
me still. We have to retire four messages. One, I can't have women still in sort of Gen Z,
messages. One, I can't have women still in sort of Gen Z, millennials say to me, well, in the time it takes me to tell him or they what to do, I should do it myself. I can't hear that anymore.
Because especially for financial feminists, what you know is that, yes, you teach somebody
something now because it will benefit your future hours, right?
That is a short-term bias.
That's a short-term time bias.
You don't want to continue to repeat that task over and over again now because they
will take away your future hours.
So we know that.
We can have women say that they're better multitaskers.
If I ever hear that word again, I'm going to take a scissor and just stab through it.
Neuroscientists all over the world, including
my favorite, who I interviewed for the book, will tell you there's no such thing as multitasking.
Women are not better at it. There's something called task switching. It's bad for all of us.
And in fact, as one neuroscientist said to me, there's no neuroscience brain difference in how
we task switch, but there's a cultural reason why we've convinced
women that they're better at wiping asses and doing dishes. Because then I can get the tenure
and golf time and you won't even let me do it. Because you take pride in all these ridiculous,
stupid tasks. Again, they're not stupid. They're work. They're important. But this is where I was
dealing with in 2011, where people weren't seeing the value of holding that child's hand in the pediatrician's office.
So that's why we get back to the original thought of this podcast, which is that Seth
had to be empowered to be invited into the home through ownership and through me sticking
to a firm boundary and then ultimately communication that came from being within a system, which
is much better than the nails on the chalkboard, fuck, fuck, fuck, resentometer communication style.
But again, this is a practice, Tori.
And so I guess I wish I could give you a hack,
but there's no hacks except for to say that
if you start practicing boundaries
and understanding your time is diamonds,
if you start practicing systems,
understanding ownership,
and then ultimately,
if you start understanding that communication
is your most important practice, then you're going to be in a good place.
I mean, it's not the hack, but the hack is how I see it is like consistency.
Consistency, for sure.
Right. It's being consistent. It is patience. And it's also the understanding that if you want things to actually change and you want your relationship to be better to your point, it's not going to happen just because you just like, I'm talking to the financial feminist and we were talking about my middle son is very obsessed with investing and compounding and he loves exponents
and he can't believe things compound the way they do. And so he has a Robinhood account. He's 11.
And so he, we look back at his Robinhood account, you know, and July 2nd, sort of,
he does this like half year analysis and whatever he made like 40
bucks or something and so we kept saying ben that's 40 bucks in your sleep and he's like but
it's so hard to be patient like it's so hard to be patient you have to wait for this to compound
and you keep saying 20 years or 30 years or 40 years so i again whether it's your financial
life whether it's your relationship health you have to to invest in it. You have, I mean, there's, again,
that's, that is the hack. The hack is the long life-changing magic of long-term thinking,
of understanding that you put the money in now, you put those small deposits in now,
and they pay off later. The consistent deposits, like you said, those, you talk about that
consistency. And so one of my favorite surveys I did on social media was to ask a thousand people
randomly what their most
important practice was. And I like to ask vague questions just to see what I get back. And so
mostly it was either a meditation practice, an exercise practice, Tori, or some sort of
religious practice. And I was very happy because I wanted to be able to say this,
that not one person out of the thousand said that communication was their most important practice.
But if anybody takes anything out of this, if there's one thing I want you to all take away,
regardless of whether you're a partnered, regardless of whether you ever will be partnered,
communication for the rest of your life will be your most important practice.
And you can get better at it. That's the cool thing. So Tori, I call this relational communication
versus transactional
communication. If you ask people why they communicate with their partner, well, there's
two answers. Typically it's either, well, I don't communicate with my partner about domestic life.
We tried that. It doesn't work. And then I used to believe that. And then I'd write down,
doesn't communicate about domestic life. And then one day this one woman said to me,
oh yeah, I don't communicate about domestic life. And then 20 minutes, she says, every time her partner forgets to put laundry in the dryer,
she's been dumping it on his pillow. So then I crossed out and Sharpie doesn't communicate
about domestic life and wrote in all caps communicates about domestic life.
Did that work? Did anything change?
No, of course not.
Yeah. Okay.
Nothing, zero. And she ended up just going back to doing the laundry
and, you know, again, just did not change. So that's one, I don't communicate about domestic
life or two, it's that I am talking to Sean or whatever, because I had to tell him to pick up
Zach from school. So either I would get, I don't communicate or it's transactional. I never heard anybody in
my entire life as a mediator say, I communicate with Tori to get better at communicating with
Tori. That's what I want to hear. If I come into a relationship with Tori and say, I'm thinking not
about just what I have to say to Tori, but how do I, and then I say, oh my God, whether it's a work,
again, this is why it's a workplace hack. It could be a Mahjong hack. It could be one for fair play. Because ultimately,
if I know that Tori is a better communicator in the morning because she's being, she checks her
emails and does a time block in the afternoon and she gets inundated by emails and then she wants
to take a break. And so if I'm asking her an important question at 6.30 p.m., I'm going to get a curt response or she's going to be annoyed, right?
That is an important thing for me to learn about you.
And then I can say, Tori is her best when she communicates in the morning.
It's not manipulative.
It's not, you know, people are like, well, isn't that manipulating people?
No, I know Tori can have high cognition, low emotion conversations in the morning.
And that's what we want to learn.
We want to learn how to best communicate with people. And so I will say that we finally came full circle, that your time is diamonds, that's boundaries, CPE is ownership, and communication
is a practice. I feel like that, if you get that out of the 101, then you've gotten more than I
think I've said in one full podcast about Fair Play ever.
Well, and I think the other thing, too, I was trying to think of my I literally was going to write them down.
And then, of course, I didn't. Consistency, patience, but also the letting go of it has to be perfect.
Because I know I feel that where I,
I have been on this journey with my partner, my partner is learning how to cook, I have become a
very good cook, because I've watched people and I've watched so much Food Network. And it's
something I love to do. And he's on this journey to learn how to cook. And I love that he's taken
this like active ownership of like, I want to learn. And then what happened when he first started
cooking is, I'm not proud of it but i would step
in and just do it for him and he was like so like he kindly he kindly had this conversation with me
he's like tori i won't learn if you do it for me yeah i love him what's his what's his name i will
not reveal his name i'll tell you after it's a private relationship okay fine all right private we'll just say thank you mr chef because yes that
mr chef is exactly right that is why fair play became a love letter to men because i never heard
from men i don't want to change my dynamics what i heard was i can't do anything right right right
and that was the moment for me where i was like oh oh, well, you know, I don't want it. I don't want to have burnt food. And he was like, did you burn food at some point? And I'm like,
yeah, I still burn food. He's like, then you got to let me burn food. And I'm like, oh, of course.
But like, I didn't think about it. It was just like, I know how to do it. Maybe he can learn
from me while I'm doing it. But he's like, I have to do it. I have to do it. And I have to burn the
food sometimes. And we'll order pizza or you can make something after I burn the food. But like, I have to learn it. And it was that moment for me
where I know cerebrally like, yeah, I need to like, let go of perfection. Like it's not going
to be exactly how I would have done it. And I might judge you for that. And I got to work through
that shit. But like, nothing's gonna change. If I keep saying, oh, I'm the only one who can do it
because it's perfect
it's the same thing with entrepreneurship like there was many moments when i was hiring people
especially in the early days where it was like again no i'm just gonna do it because like a
you like you were saying before like i don't have the time or i don't want to teach somebody but
also no one can do it like me so i just need to do it and that's not helpful no not only is not
helpful but again if you don't believe me,
you can read Dan Ariely's work. He's a behavioral economist. And he actually says that's
a present value problem. Because again, you're valuing your hours now to get it done fast over
your future hours. And that you never want to do that. You want to invest now. And that's exactly
what you're saying. I'll end on like a two minute story, I think, because something you just said
about Mr. Chef made me think of this couple. I don't always talk about them a lot because it's
a small story, but it has a Mr. Chef feel, which I love about him. And that idea of like carrying
through your mistakes and what ownership actually means in a relationship, allowing that accountability
and trust to rebuild, Tori, so you can trust eventually you'll have a meal on the table
that has some minimum standard of care, a green, a carb, a protein, or whatever you decide it is. Or as my husband says
to me, where the minimum standard of care is reversed, when you do food, Eve, the green and
the food that we agreed to can't be a shamrock from the Lucky Charms marshmallows. The green
we're talking about is a freaking vegetable. It's a freaking vegetable, right? Exactly. So I
was like, Oh, my God, you said green, you didn't say what type of green. But there was this couple
who during COVID came into the Fair Play system. And I'll call them Ed and Julie, because I don't
want to give away their names, like Mr. Chef. So they came into the system and Julie, she took, as we said, sort of this accidental
traditional role that we were talking about earlier, accidentally pulling back into the
unpaid labor because her partner got a job that required a lot of travel. So their dynamics
didn't always turn out the way they were supposed to. So she was sort of in a stay-at-home mom role,
but wanted to start regaining some of her financial power.
And so she had less time. And so I was excited that they wanted to, you know, and her partner
is the best. So we'll call him Ed. He's the best, best, best. And he wanted to learn similar to Mr.
Chef about, you know, sort of what he could do that was completion, but not perfection, like you
said. So one of the things that Ed had
been so good at was the, what we call in the fair play cards, again, in the deck where the sort of
the home cards, the green ones. So like taking out the trash and cooking and the lawn maintenance,
like the things that you sort of see and you associate with the home. But he realized by
looking and assessing the cards that he wasn't doing enough sort of the emotional labor work. So one of the cards in magic, there's a suit called
the four suits. There's home, out, caregiving, and magic. So the magic suit has things like
thank you notes that we were talking about earlier or gifts. And one is called magical beings,
which is, you know, as you can imagine, Santa, Lucky Leprechaun,
Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy.
So he decides that's the one he wants to take on as one of the magic suits.
So his wife, Julie, decides, okay, that's fine.
And then the first time that he's holding this card with ownership, the Tooth Fairy
doesn't come, Toriri so it's the second tooth
at least it wasn't the first time it was the second tooth for their daughter she knew the
tooth fairy had come before because it came for her first tooth so what julie said to me was
before fair play this is what their dynamic would have been. She would have taken the card back and said,
not only that, I will do it now from now on.
I'm going to be Tooth Fairy again.
But then she would have been the verbal assassin and said,
you ruined our child's magic.
Like, I can never trust you ever again.
You fucking suck.
I knew you couldn't do it.
But she didn't do that because they were in this sort of this fair play system,
which requires that you carry through your mistake.
So Ed actually owned it and said, my bad.
Like, this was my responsibility.
So once he owned it, because she said the typical way he would have done things, and
he admitted this, was he would have blamed Julie for not reminding him to put the dollar
under the pillow.
He didn't do that. The second he didn't blame her for reminding him. And he said, Oh my God,
I I'm totally, I suck. I can't believe I forgot. She said, okay, well then carry through your
mistake. Yep. So guess what he does. He tells his daughter, he's emailing tooth fairy at gmail.com
to be like, what the hell tooth fairy?
What happened?
She sees him emailing in the morning, like, you know, tooth fairy gmail.com.
He throws the email out there in the world while she's at school.
He's going to do the dollar that night or whatever.
Creepily, he gets a response.
Somebody actually answers tooth fairy at gmail.com.
Whoever you are out there, we love you.
If we can find you if we can find you someone can find you speaking of magic oh my goodness somebody answers this email she writes back there's been
a supply chain backlog or whatever she said i can't get to all the teeth because we can't get
to shipping containers to take the teeth away whatever she said i don't have the exact if it's covid yeah you know i was i start to like tear up he prints out the email he prints out the
email and he shares it with his daughter and he says look what happened and he's and then he added
which the tooth fairy sometimes tooth fairy mistakes mistakes too they and then he said
the best part the pieces of resistance that I love about this
small story is he told me, he said to his daughter that when the tooth fairy comes late,
she charges interest or we can charge interest to her. So she brings like double the money.
And so she, so from now on, right, this is now two years later, his daughter,
whose teeth are falling out like crazy, keeps saying, is the tooth fairy coming out in time or do I get double the money?
She's coming late.
And guess what?
He's still the tooth fairy, Tori.
So that to me, it's a small, small story,
but it reminds me of Mr. Chef
in that by Julie giving Ed the chance
to carry through his mistake,
they have this incredible story now.
So I said to her,
I'm so proud you didn't take it back and do the verbal assassin thing. I'm so glad that
Ed took the accountability and it's small changes, but I'm telling you, once you build on those Mr.
Chef changes, I trust you to get food on the plate. Yes. If it's burnt, we'll order pizza.
Over time, you build more ownership wins, accountability and trust and
communication stays there. And then by the time kids come around, you have this beautiful pattern
of not doing everything right. We will all make mistakes. But you know, at your check-in, when
your emotion is low, your cognition is high conversations, that practice we're talking about,
you can say to your partner, okay, what happened? You dropped the ball on the feeding card tonight. You know, dinner wasn't on the table. You gave the shamrock
as the green. You can end up giving people feedback that's not in the moment that they can
hear. So I think that's the beauty of my Tooth Fairy story, but it's also the beauty of what
you said about the Mr. Chef story. Eve, wow. One of my favorite episodes i think we've ever recorded i am at the same time
teary and also just i'm literally calling him after and just being like all right here's how
we're gonna do this i think this is gonna be really helpful so amazingly weirdly life-affirming
at the same time i'm pissed off but i'm also like you know know what? Okay. Okay. There's a path forward. Yes. Yes.
Tori, can I give you one last homework assignment? Yes, please. So if you go on to the website and
you just pick a card or again, I will send you these cards, however you do it. Do you have
physical cards? Yes. I'm going to send them to you. Oh, cool. Okay. So I'm going to send them
to you because what I want you and Mr. Chef to do, which anyone can do, like I said, go on the
website, just pick one, or you can use the cards to do this, but I'm going to send them to you because what I want you and Mr. Chef to do, which anyone can do, like I said, go on the website, just pick one or you can use the cards to do this.
But I'm going to send these to you.
Okay.
Weird question.
Does it work if we're not living together?
100%.
Okay, cool.
1000%.
That's the time I beg you to start this.
Yes.
Because the beauty, you know why?
That's what I figured.
Because you'll probably have like this many cards, which means that you can actually like talk about them and it'll be amazing.
You know, it'll be amazing. You know,
it'll be like travel and make small changes before you have to excavate. It'll be like travel
planning, like who wants to plan the trip and the ownership of that. Really funny. We're going to
Europe in two days and I've planned this entire trip, which is a conversation we have had. We've
had a lot of conversations about the distribution of that. I love it. I love it. You know what,
by the way, you held the card for this trip. So next time, what I would say to Mr. Schaaf is
you maybe next time you hold the travel card, right? Include me in the planning.
This is not about going wrong. The way we're splitting it is I am planning everything like
the flights, the hotels, everything to get there. And then when we are there,
it is his responsibility. That is the distribution. Okay.
That's a great, I love that distribution because there's ownership mindset in it.
You are already doing ownership mindset.
You're not saying I'm planning my ticket and then he's going to execute by calling
the travel agent to book it.
No, no, that, that, those are the disasters of the conception planning execution breakup.
I love that you already put the ownership mindset in.
I'm in charge of booking. I'm in charge of tickets. I'm in charge of hotels. You have
ownership over our daily plans. That's a beautiful fair play mindset. So while you're on the plane,
so that's why I said, I want to FedEx these to you and get them to you before you.
That's so nice of you. Thank you.
Make sure, please, Kristen, I'm giving you a random assignment of a task. It's not very
fair play. If
you could just send me Tori's address or the best place to send it. Um, but on the plane,
what you can do, or just take a couple with you, start telling each other your stories
that because you're not holding a lot of cards yet, you can do some real beauty
and starting to tell each other your stories. And so that's my, my homework assignment for you.
And so let's do a 30 second exercise where I can show you how it works. So just,
just tell me when to stop. And I'm just going to just pull a card.
This really does feel like a magic trick. Stop. Okay, great. Here we go.
It's called informal education kids. So this is how I want you to play. So you pull any card out
of the deck. And then I want
you to ask Mr. Chef and he will ask you, and this should be time limited, like, you know,
two minutes each. Or you know what, if you're on the plane and you want to do it longer with a
glass of wine, it could be 30 minutes each. But I want you to tell me, Tori, what do you remember
growing up about things that you learned that were not through school?
So what I mean is who taught you to ride a bike? Do you remember learning to tie your shoes?
Do you remember any other things that you learned and who taught you? So like, I'll start with like
riding a bike. Did you learn to ride a bike? Do you remember who taught you or tying your shoe
or anything like that? Yeah. I'm realizing in a really cool way, it was actually both my parents.
like that. Yeah, I'm realizing in a really cool way. It was actually both my parents.
Like I think it was I have distant, very distinct memories of going it was kind of dramatic me learning how to ride a bike. But we went to like an empty parking lot. It was my mom and my dad.
And I think my dad was like riding along with me. But my mom was there for like encouragement and
advice about how to get pedaling. And then I think shoelaces, probably my mom took the lead on that
one. But I do remember my dad being there too. With those specific examples, it feels pretty,
pretty equitable. I love that. And, and by the way, so what I learned about Tori that I didn't
know about her before, right, was that she lived in a home that sounded like, you know, there was
two parents there that there was a father figure still together happily married yeah that that
loved her exactly and so what i could see right is that if you don't talk about it you would either
expect that your partner would show up for bike riding the way you would right or learning to
that you'd all do things together and maybe like me your partner i had to learn to ride a bike
myself because no one reminded me to ride a bike. So I learned at my friend's house because her parents helped me because my parents were
never around.
So there's pain in that.
So maybe I don't even want to deal with riding a bike.
So the point is that we come to everything with our own assumptions.
And I think that I would know, I know more about Tori's bike riding than I did about
Seth's bike riding after being married to him for 10 years because we never talked about these stories we never and there's just such beauty because when it comes up
later way later you're investing in these conversations so that you know oh this this
could be a possible trigger point because it was so different for us or this will be fun because
it's so it should be fun because it's both the same well and even very simply like I will learn
something about Mr. Schiff I will learn something about Mr. Schiff.
I will learn something about him that I've never asked him.
How did you learn to ride a bike?
Like I've never asked him that.
He's never asked me that, right?
Like that would be a beautiful moment for me to learn something about this person that
I love very much that I'm always trying to figure out more things about.
So that would be really helpful.
I love that's so helpful.
I love it.
I love it.
So that that's the game.
It's fun. I would love it. I love it. So that's the game. It's fun.
I would say do it on the plane.
Do it with a couple of cards and just tell each other your stories.
It's all about just learning about each other and being curious at this point.
I love it.
Eve, where can people find you, find your work, find the cards, find the materials?
Tell us.
Plug away.
So the best place I'd say is just the Fair Play Life website because we keep it updated
with a lot of science and our newsletter has all the new science around all these issues, couples,
relationships, and the division of labor, and a lot of the societal issues that we were talking
about earlier. And then the Fair Play Life is Instagram. And then of course, my personal
Instagram is Eve Rodsky, but that's a more angry Instagram. If you want to learn, you know, about
my personal feelings around Supreme Court cases and abortion access. We can always use a little more of that.
Thank you for being here. And thank you. Thank you for your work.
Of course. Thank you, Tori. Oh, that was so good.
Sorry, I know we went over, but you know what you'll edit?
No, that was truly one of my favorite episodes we've ever done.
I want to thank Eve so much for joining us.
She literally, after this episode, we wrapped up recording.
She sent actually two decks of her fair play cards.
And yeah, I started to dive into those with, as she lovingly calls him, Mr. Chef.
And it's been really eye-opening both for me and it's truly brought us closer together
because we're starting to have conversations just about our relationship and dynamics. And so again,
it doesn't feel in any way like confrontational or scary because we're just having these beautiful
conversations, getting to know each other better. Fair play and find your unicorn space are
available wherever you get your books. Again, I highly recommend them. And for more information
about Eve's work, you can go to our show notes. I appreciate your support as always, Financial Feminists. You know the drill.
Subscribe, share the show, leave a review, leave us a voicemail if you haven't already. It allows
us to continue doing this free show for you all and producing the best content possible. So we
appreciate your support. We hope you have a great day, a great week, a great end to summer, and I will talk to you soon.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields, marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Sophia Cohen, Khalil Dumas, Elizabeth McCumber,
A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show. For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K,
our guests, and episode show notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com.