My toxic trait is reading books I know I will disagree with for either the educational or entertainment value. It came as no surprise that I took issue with Ask Your Husband. My surprise is *where* I took issue with it.
Due to my proclivity to read books boasting hot takes, I have stumbled across my fair share of faulty theology and woke feminist nonsense, but never have I stumbled across an author toward whom I felt such personal disdain until I was introduced to this work by Mrs. Timothy J. Gordon.
As I began reading this book, I remarked to my husband that I would love to speak to the author in real life because this book is penned in such lofty language it is nigh unrelatable and I would like to hear her thoughts in “real talk.” Toward the middle of this book, I changed my stance to, “I would love to never have to speak to this woman in person because she sounds kind of terrible.” Toward the end of this book, I cried out in horrified dismay: “Wow, this woman is such a condescending bitch!”
Ask Your Husband. Ha! My husband asked me why I continued to subject myself to this torture if it was truly “that bad.” (It’s like a train wreck. I couldn’t look away.)
My issue is not with her belief about the Biblical role of women in the home; it’s in the way she cannot seem to present these facts without exhibiting a completely un-Biblical attitude toward her fellow woman.
While I thought her references to the “shrill-sounding, overtaxed vocal cords” of the screeching feminists were a bit much, I rolled my eyes and otherwise overlooked the petty digs because this is very obviously an anti-feminist book. But when she assaulted the “crunchy mom movement” (presumably for the sin of investing too much time in their homemade efforts when they could be working “smarter not harder”), I lost the remaining sliver of respect I was trying to hold onto for this author.
As a stay-at-home wife and mother (coming from a long line of stay-at-home wives and mothers), I wholeheartedly agree that our families need more godly women who are committed to hearth and home, which is why I was surprised to find Mrs. Gordon seemingly belittling an entire subset of women who share that sacred goal simply because they raise and butcher chickens while refusing to feed their children Lucky Charms.
What does it matter to her which homemaking skills a woman chooses to spend her time cultivating so long as her family is well cared for? The author’s list of corner-cutting time savers that immediately follows her critique of crunchy moms is a matter of personal preference (8 of the 13 suggestions did not appeal to me in the least), but the author appears to condemn anyone whose family life differs from own.
Consider her critique of families who “squander entire weekends shuttling children around town to some trifling activity” going so far as to say, “Most of these activities are self-evidently meaningless to both kids and parents—just a way of wasting valuable time.” (In case you’re wondering, this is where my “condescending bitch” comment slipped out.) The arrogance with which Mrs. Gordon assumes these “insipid activities” are meaningless to other families just because she does not personally see the appeal is astounding to me.
While I would agree that most American families are overcommitted and spread thin due to the many opportunities available to us, condemning their interests as a whole rather than gently suggesting that some things may need to be dropped from the schedule for the sake of providing more flexible family time is not the way to win converts.
If you cannot present your argument without attacking the character of those who think differently from you, I have little respect for your opinions (I say, after calling this author a nasty name 😂). I should have predicted the direction this book was going to take from the opening pages in which she remarks that Twitter is no place for a lady. No, my dear, Twitter is no place for a person who cannot disagree with another person without resorting to petty insults. But I digress.
I’d love to read some concept of this book written in more relatable speech by someone who is open to the idea that there are multiple ways to run a home while still adhering to Biblical standards.
Mrs. Gordon has the right idea, but due to her condescending approach, falls terribly short in application.