butterandjam
All our life together we've shared childcare and housework, DIY and gardening.Today, he made breakfast, stripped and changed the bed, made bread and a cake, washed up lunch; I washed up breakfast, made lunch, and advance cooked tomorrow's lunch because we'll be out all morning. I put the bedding in the washer, he dried it and put it away. Sharing chores is such a long and seamless habit we never bother to discuss who's going to do what or when. We both replace loo rolls, clean lavs, put the dirty laundry in basket, put out the rubbish,plan meals, cook, and there's a running shopping list stuck on the fridge that we both add to. Whoever goes shopping takes the list from the fridge.
Yes, I think sharing of housework and chores, etc needs to be established from the start, and if it going to work in retirement. Very difficult to get out of old habits. This even more so for those who never had a job outside the home/family.
In our case, I always did everything in the home and later with the children, for 8 years. This is not because DH was sexist, or unfair, but because I didn't have an outside job, and he worked such long hours, often having to live at his place of work for nights and week-ends on top of day job. When your partner works 135 hrs a week, and you don't- you don't ask him or her to share the houseworl when he or she finally comes home, needing a complete rest. And when I went to full time Uni, with 2 young children (when youngest started school)- he still worked about 90 hours, including 1 night and 1 week-end in 3 or 4 - on top of very long days, ad still plenty of professional work to do at home.
We got help with housework then, and occasional help with after school childcare if our professional duties clashed. But still I did most of the organising, childcare and home/garden, because my hours, full time, were a lot less than his.
Now we have retired- I still do most of it- decorating, housework, gardening ... again, not because he is sexist or unfair, but I've always done it all and it sticks. He does his own ironing, and will help if I ask nicely. But the pattern is set. If always had a friend cleaner even when I stopped working, and when we moved But she retired and was not replaced. Perhaps I should find someone again- or get someone in to do some of the difficult jobs liks windows and walls/ceilings, etc.
He will come with me shopping if I ask- but if he goes, he forgets the list and comes home with all the things he gets tempted with and none that was on the list!