Molly Man

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Women are right -- men are pigs.

Despite race, creed, color, or financial situation, every man in the world shares one trait --I mean besides having to be heavily sedated and dragged kicking and screaming to any movie about relationships. The universal male trait in question is the aversion to keeping things clean. If ever there was one flag representing all men, there could be no image more appropriate than a pair of dirty socks on the floor. Long may they stink.

Not that this is any excuse, but we men do have historical precedent for being slobs. This dates back to the Garden of Eden, where Eve was irked to find Adam's apple cores everywhere, despite the Thou Shalt Not Litter signs in plain view. In the Middle Ages, kings themselves would toss their just-eaten beef ribs on the floor for their dogs. This would really irritate their queens, who were already quite steamed about the king's refusal to take out the garbage.

This dates back to the Garden of Eden, where Eve was irked to find Adam's apple cores everywhere.

Incredibly, there was even litter on man's first journey to the moon: a Nestles Crunch Bar wrapper and one of Neil Armstrong's socks. Little known fact: Armstrong said "one small step for man" for a reason -- he couldn't find his other sock.
What's behind this male aversion to keeping things clean? Laziness? Stupidity? Insensitivity? Too easy -- those are reasons for everything else men do or don't do. There are, in fact, three basic reasons why men hate cleaning. Actually, there are four, but I wrote the fourth one down on the back of a Fudgcicle wrapper, and now it's somewhere in this pile of papers and half-eaten sandwiches on my desk and I can't find it.

The first reason men hate cleaning is that they somehow believe that cleaning is women's work and so by doing it, they'll be perceived as less masculine. Unfortunately, this too has historical precedent. At the high point of his career, Alexander the Great was spotted dusting his shield. For the remainder of his life, no matter how impressive his accomplishments, whenever he passed by, onlookers would snicker and refer to him as, first, Alexander the Duster; then, Dusty, Dustine, and finally, just Dust. Eventually, this drove him insane. At his funeral, mourners could not help but scoff and toss feather dusters on top of his coffin.

The second reason men hate cleaning is that they are convinced it is a low-priority activity, when they don't even have time to complete their abundance of high-priority activities. Among the high-priority activities men believe take precedence over cleaning are: napping, watching sports games on TV, bowling, drinking beer with their buddies, and attending How to Have a Great Marriage Without Spending Any Time with your Wife seminars.

The third reason men hate cleaning is that they see this hate as a rebellion against authority. Think of it as the Revolutionary War, without issues or intelligence. As young boys, their mothers were constantly badgering them to pick up their clothes from the floor, wash their hands, clean up their rooms. The universal male dream was always When I Grow Up And Have My Own Place, I'll Be As Sloppy As I Want And No One Will Be Able To Tell Me What To Do. The irony, of course, is that if a man is married, he'll still be told what to do. And if he's single, he better clean if he doesn't want to remain one of those weird slobby single guys for the rest of his life.

He better clean if he doesn't want to remain one of those weird slobby single guys for the rest of his life.

Of course, sometimes men do make a sincere effort to clean. They do this in an attempt to 1) Impress a date, 2) Placate a wife, or 3) Tidy up before the parole officer arrives to inspect. And when men do try to clean, you can pretty much count on their either breaking something, ruining something, or burning something down. Before asking a man to clean, always be sure the place is insured for full replacement value.

Getting men to clean, though, need not be seen as a hopeless cause. My suggestion -- have macho role models do public service announcements promoting men cleaning: "This is Arnold Schwarzenegger. You may know me as the Terminator but when I'm at home, I just love terminating the mildew from the tiles in my shower. Like we say in my native Austria – dirty men are girly men." Immediately, men throughout America would pick up sponges, mops, and vacuums. And then immediately put them down 'cause the commercials are over and the game's back on. But hey, it's a start.

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