The Pathogen Of Least Resistance
I live with my girlfriend, who's really picky about how clean and tidy the house has to be. God forbid I put a bowl on the dish rack that isn't perfectly immaculate or leave tiny bits of hair in the sink after I shave. She gets totally grossed out by small things that I don't think are a big deal. If this stuff is ridiculous, should I really have to abide by her rules? And is this a woman thing? Other girlfriends of mine have been like this, too.
--Annoyed
It's nice when your girlfriend always has your back -- but not because she's constantly two steps behind you with the wet mop.
Research consistently finds that women have far greater "disgust sensitivity" than men -- meaning they have a stronger predisposition to experience disgust. Disgust -- like Little Pigs, Blind Mice, and Stooges -- comes in three forms (per evolutionary psychologist Joshua Tybur): sexual, moral, and pathogen.
Sexual disgust leads a person to feel creeped out about having sex with evolutionarily disadvantageous partners (too old, too closely related, or sporting a big pustule that screams STD.) Moral disgust leads us to be all "Oh, yuck!" about people who violate moral standards. And finally, there's the pathogen disgust your girlfriend's expressing, which protects us from bacteria, viruses, parasites, and toxins by making us beat a retreat from sick people, dead bodies, spoiled food, and bodily fluids like mucus, spit, and poo.
Evolutionary psychologist Laith Al-Shawaf and his colleagues call women's greater disgust sensitivity "puzzling in light of their well-documented immunological superiority." Though we think of women as more physically fragile than men, they actually have "stronger immune responses," which offer them "better protection than men from a variety of diseases" and "more vigorous defenses against bacteria, viruses, and ... parasites."
However, Al-Shawaf and his colleagues have some evolutionarily driven hypotheses -- informed guesses -- for why women are more easily grossed out: (a) Women's bodies are basically the factories where both parents' genes get passed on to the next generation. (b) Mothers are also more likely to transmit infections to children. (c) Women have likewise had a greater role in "keeping children away from pathogens and teaching them effective disease-avoidance principles." (d) Ancestral women had a greater role in food cleaning and prep.
The researchers had a couple of hypotheses about men, too -- why men evolved to have lower levels of disgust: (a) It serves men to "to convey immune strength" to attract babes and to "facilitate short-term mating." (Men's lowered standards for hygiene, etc., mean a larger pool of potential sex partners! This can be taken too far, as in, on a seriously yuckeroo note, let's just say it's typically men, not women, who engage in necrophilia...which is to say, who look at a corpse and see a potential hookup.) (b) As the hunters and warriors of the species, men need lower levels of disgust "related to blood, injury, and death" lest they be all "Shoot it with an arrow? But it'll bleed, and I pass out at the sight of blood!"
As interesting as all of this speculation is, for purposes of relationship harmony, the reason your girlfriend is more easily disgusted doesn't actually matter. Likewise, whether what she wants you to do seems rational isn't relevant, either -- tempting as it might be to adjudicate this on scientific grounds, a la "Is a little encrusted whatever really going to kill us?"
Understanding this is important. A lot of unnecessary relationship conflict comes out of people thinking they need to stand up against beliefs by their partner that they find kind of Cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs. Often -- assuming a partner's beliefs are merely annoying, not endangering -- a wiser approach is acting on the principle that the facts matter vastly less than the feelings behind them.
In your situation, for example, what counts is that you're kind and respectful -- meaning that you do your best to remember to clean up, especially in the bathroom and kitchen (major gross-out arenas) -- simply because it's important to your girlfriend. And when you forget -- which you're sure to do -- apologize, making sure to validate her feelings: "I know this matters to you...I'll try to do better..." Hearing that you get where she's coming from tells her something -- that she doesn't need to keep fighting to make you understand.
There's that saying, "Would you rather be right or be happy?" The truth is, you can be both -- silently laughing to yourself about the absurd contradictions of humanity: Just because we ladies go "Uh-huh...whatever..." about the gazillions of microscopic germs reportedly living on our smartphones doesn't mean we can be all "No probski!" about the retirement community for bacteria that we picture on that food-globbed soup bowl you set on the dish rack.
For pages and pages of "science-help" from me, buy my latest book, "Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence." It lays out the PROCESS of transforming to live w/confidence.








I'm with GF. This isn't a couple socks on the floor... dirty dishes getting put away? Hair in the sink? Those are both pretty gross. Accidents happen sometimes, but generally, if you wash the dishes then clean them, don't put them back with food on them that's gonna grow mold. And rinse the damn sink.
I say this as someone who has a bit of clutter around. I'm a decent housekeeper but I'm not amazing. What you're doing is gross.
Nicolek at July 23, 2019 6:16 PM
And right there's the difference between the average man and the average woman. Given a choice between getting every hair from trimming my stubble, and being on time for work, I'm going to quickly rinse the sink to get most of it, and run to work. My wife would rather be late.
Of course, food on the dishes you put away is just gross for us, too.
SlowMindThinking at July 23, 2019 7:05 PM
Just tell her, "I'll remember this conversation the next time you want me to go down on you during your period."
Cousin Dave at July 24, 2019 6:26 AM
As interesting as all of this speculation is
Interesting to you perhaps, Amy, but I'm getting tired of long-winded evo psych explanations for every aspect of human behavior, and I doubt that I'm alone in this.
The useful part of the reply follows the above-quoted excerpt, and can be boiled down to: If you want your relationship to last, treat this not as a question of who's right and who's wrong but as a matter of personal preference. And respect your girlfriend's preference.
Rex Little at July 24, 2019 7:38 AM
Hmm, I interpreted it as a bowlful of those tiny hairs from shaving. If he's rinsed the sink and there are like one or two hairs left I amend my answer.
Overall, though, people shouldn't have to deal with your body waste.
NicoleK at July 24, 2019 7:58 AM
God forbid I put a bowl on the dish rack that isn't perfectly immaculate
What does that mean, exactly? it almost sounds like she's got some sort of MILSPEC standard of cleanliness that us mere mortals can only aspire.
If the LW is knowingly putting dirty dishes in the drying rack, bad man! Sometimes stuff happens, and when I find I've missed a spot I just toss the offending bit of dishware into the sink so it can be washed again.
Regarding the bathroom situation, find a place with two. One can be her's and she can fancy it up as much as she likes. One can be yours, and make sure she understands that it is yours and that you'll clean it as you see fit and that she shouldn't set foot in it unless there's a really good reason. Just like you won't set foot in her bathroom.
Interesting to you perhaps, Amy, but I'm getting tired of long-winded evo psych explanations for every aspect of human behavior, and I doubt that I'm alone in this.
If Amy has found a way to force people to read her stuff, she needs to patent straight away and license out the tech to Usual Suspects for Big $$$$.
I R A Darth Aggie at July 24, 2019 10:37 AM
The LW undoubtedly suffers from Male Genetic Dirt Blindness, an exceedingly common syndrome.
Rex Little at July 24, 2019 9:36 PM
Yes, Rex, you are alone. Amy’s research is extremely helpful and I’ve repeated it many many times to friends who find it helpful too
Mary at July 28, 2019 9:11 PM
Yes, Rex, you are alone. Amy’s research is extremely helpful and I’ve repeated it many many times to friends who find it helpful too
Mary at July 28, 2019 9:13 PM
Yes, Rex, you are alone. Amy’s research is extremely helpful and I’ve repeated it many many times to friends who find it helpful too
Mary at July 28, 2019 9:25 PM
LW, I'd like to see it from your point of view, but what's the point when you you've already decided your GFs are wrong? I mean, just look at your words:
"...picky..."
"...God forbid..."
"...ridiculous..."
"...abide by her rules..."
"...is this a woman thing..."
Dude...seriously? Respecting your woman won't make it smaller. No lie.
Steve at August 1, 2019 10:11 AM
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