With the help of women across the country, I catalogued every single action I took in service of my family that had a quantifiable time component.
After timing herself picking up trash from the lawn, Rodsky decided to start a spreadsheet. Working to change society one marriage at a time by creating a 21st century solution to an age-old problem. You know, all the work it takes to stay on top of laundry, not let the insurance policy lapse, keep track of all those endless school meetings. Eve Rodsky. And what I found was, the science backs this up. She thought it was amusing but when she got home from her trip that night, the jacket and bottle were still there. So she started a spreadsheet. For years she, like many other women, had shouldered the burden of invisible labor at home.
Rodsky, a Harvard-educated lawyer and organizational management specialist who advises families and charitable foundations, was tired of being the “she-fault” parent. A spreadsheet that went viral. Eve Rodsky is working to change society one marriage at a time by coming up with a new 21st century solution to an age-old problem: women shouldering the brunt of childrearing and domestic life responsibilities regardless of whether they work outside the home. 50/50 is the absolute wrong equation. She lives in Los Angeles.
She also interviewed over 500 couples from around the world about their domestic balance. Three Pines is a great place to visit. Three Pines is a great place to visit.
So I created a “Sh*t I Do” spreadsheet. ... Of course, it's a spreadsheet too. So she started a spreadsheet. Eve Rodsky was fed up. That something is a brand-new book: Fair Play: A Game-Changing Solution for When You Have Too Much To Do and More Life to Live.
Eve Rodsky is the author of the new book Fair Play: A Game-Changing Solution for When You Have Too Much to Do (and More Life to Live). I love Excel, so it was a 98 tab spreadsheet about probably like 17 million megabytes, ended up being over a thousand items of invisible work. You know, all the work it takes to stay on top of laundry, not let the insurance policy lapse, keep track of all those endless school meetings. SWB: Eve Rodsky is obsessed with domestic labor. Eve Rodsky, the author, who is both a mother of 3 and a Harvard-educated lawyer, was on her way home from a business trip when her husband texted her that a drunk man had left a bottle and his jacket in their front lawn. More about Eve Rodsky. Author Eve Rodsky just wanted her husband to take out the trash without being asked. All that often-invisible labor was exhausting Eve Rodsky. So she did something about it—for her family, and for all of us.
Eve Rodsky: That's where it goes. That's where it goes. I just finished Lady in the Lake.
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Eve Rodsky I love to dive into mystery fiction and women's authors -- I love Louise Penny's book including a Better Man. "I wanted to find out what the invisible workload was," Rodsky said. 1.1K likes. Rodsky, a Harvard-educated lawyer and organizational management specialist who advises families and charitable foundations, was tired of being the “she-fault” parent. Eve Rodsky: So the Shit I Do spreadsheet evolves over time into the 100 Fair Play cards.