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Am I Wrong???

beetroot72

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Dec 4, 2006
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McHenry, Illinois
2.5 car attached garage, insulated, finished, and heated. All I ask is for my wife to brush the excess snow off her van before she pulls in. Or to leave it out and I will gladly do it myself. No drains allowed in garage floors around here. Most water drips/puddles dry up in no time @ 68 degrees but if you pull in with 6" of snow on the car I have a SWAMP! Sure I'll squeegee it out but C'mon!
The Back 5' of the garage (against the house) is a step up so my Bench, fridge, tools and stuff will stay dry.

I just don't like the mess. And if I need to work on the Old Caddy I'm screwed.
My wife says it's a garage and is supposed to get dirty!:withstupi
Is that grounds for a Divorce?
If that's not an Irreconcilable difference than what is?
:headscrat
 
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Tscott

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Well, if your house is anything like mine then she pretty much has the run of the house for the most part. She probably complains if you leave dirty laundry on the floor. How would she feel if you just started stacking dishes in the dish washer and leaving them for weeks at a time and when she complains, you say " Hell honey its a sink it's supposed to get dirty dishes in it". Bottom line, she needs to allow you to have your space too and she must respect that space as if it were her own. Just because she believes a garage is just a catch all for dirty cars, doesn't make it true. This is just good manners and and due respect.


Tom
 

BoCRon

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Alpharetta GA USA
Since you offerred to brush the snow off for her, then I can't see why she has an issue. Of course, I don't live in an area that gets snow, so I'm not sure how'd I'd do with that request. If she's coming home and unloading groceries, kids, dry cleaning and the never-ending loads of kid stuff, then stopping in the driveway and dragging all that to the house in nasty weather would irk me. My husband is pretty good about that stuff, realizing that I absolutely hate the "pack mule" aspect of my job as the wife and that if he doesn't want to deal with me in a foul mood then he better not complain about how that part of running the house gets done. The unloading once you get home is the final stretch and adding cleaning up the snow might just be the straw so to speak. Of course, the fact that I went on strike last year for about a month and refused to do any household shopping and made hubby and kids do all of it for awhile may have something to do with the change in attitude :bounce: .
Since I'm the picky one about the garage at my house, it's not an issue.
Annette
 
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beetroot72

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BoCRon said:
Since you offerred to brush the snow off for her, then I can't see why she has an issue. Of course, I don't live in an area that gets snow, so I'm not sure how'd I'd do with that request. If she's coming home and unloading groceries, kids, dry cleaning and the never-ending loads of kid stuff, then stopping in the driveway and dragging all that to the house in nasty weather would irk me. My husband is pretty good about that stuff, realizing that I absolutely hate the "pack mule" aspect of my job as the wife and that if he doesn't want to deal with me in a foul mood then he better not complain about how that part of running the house gets done. The unloading once you get home is the final stretch and adding cleaning up the snow might just be the straw so to speak. Of course, the fact that I went on strike last year for about a month and refused to do any household shopping and made hubby and kids do all of it for awhile may have something to do with the change in attitude :bounce: .
Since I'm the picky one about the garage at my house, it's not an issue.
Annette

Yes, the almost 3 yr old twins along with everything that comes with them is an issue... But I can manage. Also she is a speech therapist for birth to 3yr olds and her van is full of "therapy toys" I'm not a tyrant and can understand the pain in the *** of it but to come home to a swamp and to not know if she even gave it a thought....well, that ...makes me "pissy":headshake
 

birdmayon

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I let the fiance have say over pretty much the whole house. But the garage is MINE. If she doesn't like my garage rules, she can park outside.

She should be understanding of your request, especially since you offered to brush the snow off for her.
 

bluesman2a

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See, you guys made the 1st mistake. When I met my now-wife, I already owned our current home and the garage was already "occupied" and has remained "occupied" with my projects over the years. Now that we are moving to a new house with an attached and a detached, she is having delusions of parking indoors, which I quickly/firmly correct and point to the gravel parking pad :bitchslap :wtf:

It's like any other training regimen, set boundaries early, and train to those boundaries. :lol_hitti
 

Junkman

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It is important for men to remember that, as women grow older, it becomes harder for them to maintain the same quality of housekeeping as when they were younger. When you notice this, try not to yell at them. Some are oversensitive, and there's nothing worse than an oversensitive woman.

My name is Junk. Let me relate how I handled the situation with my wife, Peggy. When I retired a few years ago, it became necessary for Peggy to get a full time job along with her part time job, both for extra income and for the health benefits that we needed. Shortly after she started working, I noticed she was beginning to show her age. I usually get home from the golf club about the same time she gets home from work.

Although she knows how hungry I am, she almost always says she has to rest for half an hour or so before she starts dinner. I don't yell at her. Instead, I tell her to take her time and just wake me when she gets dinner on the table.

I generally have lunch in the Men's Grill at the club so eating out is not reasonable. I'm ready for some home-cooked grub when I hit that door.

She used to do the dishes as soon as we finished eating. But now it's not unusual for them to sit on the table for several hours after dinner.

I do what I can by diplomatically reminding her several times each evening that they won't clean themselves. I know she really appreciates this, as it does seem to motivate her to get them done before she goes to bed.

Another symptom of aging is complaining, I think. For example she will say that it is difficult for her to find time to pay the monthly bills during her lunch hour But, boys, we take 'em for better or worse, so I just smile and offer encouragement. I tell her to stretch it out over two or even three days. That way she won't have to rush so much. I also remind her that missing lunch completely now and then wouldn't hurt her any (if you know what I mean). I like to think tact is one of my strong points.

When doing simple jobs, she seems to think she needs more rest periods. She had to take a break when she was only half finished mowing the yard.

I try not to make a scene. I'm a fair man. I tell her to fix herself a nice, big, cold glass of freshly squeezed lemonade and just sit for a while. And, as long as she is making one for herself, she may as well make one for me too.

I know that I probably look like a saint in the way I support Peggy. I'm not saying that showing this much consideration is easy. Many men will find it difficult. Some will find it impossible! Nobody knows better than I do how frustrating women get as they get older.

However, guys, even if you just use a little more tact and less criticism of your aging wife because of this article, I will consider that writing it was well worthwhile. After all, we are put on this earth to help each other.

Signed,

Junk

EDITOR'S NOTE:

Junk died suddenly on January 27 of a perforated ******. The police report says he was found with a Calloway extra long 50-inch Big Bertha Driver II golf club jammed up his rear end, with barely 5 inches of grip showing and a sledge hammer laying nearby.

His wife Peggy was arrested and charged with murder. The all-woman jury took only 15 minutes to find her Not Guilty, accepting her defense that Junk somehow, without looking, accidentally sat down on his golf club.
 
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beetroot72

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Junk, You Kill me!:bowdown:


I'v gone as far as disabling the opener and boy, did she ever throw a FIT!:tantrum2:

Lets move on to drainage....any ideas?
 

KingPerformance

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My wife is a Speech Therapist, so I know the feeling of the 1 seater full size car filled with "therapy tools". I actually aligned the car with all the "tools" in it so it would stop wearing the tires funny. She too is in the early intervention so the playschool sedan is ALWAYS trashed on the inside. I started mine early on as to what a garage/shop is, its purpose, and if she wishes to be in it she has to follow the rules. As a result, her office, car, bed room, bathroom, and pretty much everywhere else is kept up to her standards or lack there of when it comes to the play school car. It is a simple understanding, and my wife does spend some time out in the shop with me even though she does not like “cars” or getting greasy. It may actually take some time, but if you talk to her instead of just complain to her when she parks the car in the garage she may understand your reasoning. Remember, women turn their ears off when they think you are going to say something they don’t like. If she doesn’t reason with you, then the only option is the detached garage. Make sure you DOUBLE what ever it is you truly want (and know you can’t afford) and tell her how much it costs. Make SURE you tell her that is the only way to go; it’s the most bang for the buck. When the dollar figures start to compile you will be surprised how well she starts to appreciate you working out of that tiny little garage just to get her the things she wants and needs. Feel free to add in any other options to get anything else you want.
 

justinmc

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Vicious_Cycle said:
There is only one solution. You need a 32x48 detached garage/shop. I see no way around this eventuality.


Vicious_Cycles marriage counseling... that'll be $300 per session and use of the newly constructed shop on odd weekends. Thanks and you two have a lovely day and marriage. :bounce:
 

Larz

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Kentucky
You're going about it from the wrong angle. It has to benefit her for the garage floor to be kept clean. Try this:
Honey, I just want to keep the garage floor clean so the nastiness doesn't get tracked in on the floor. You work so hard to keep the house clean, and I want to do my part.

Try it and report back to us!!!:beer:
 
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beetroot72

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KingPerformance said:
My wife is a Speech Therapist, so I know the feeling of the 1 seater full size car filled with "therapy tools". I actually aligned the car with all the "tools" in it so it would stop wearing the tires funny. She too is in the early intervention so the playschool sedan is ALWAYS trashed on the inside. I started mine early on as to what a garage/shop is, its purpose, and if she wishes to be in it she has to follow the rules. As a result, her office, car, bed room, bathroom, and pretty much everywhere else is kept up to her standards or lack there of when it comes to the play school car. It is a simple understanding, and my wife does spend some time out in the shop with me even though she does not like “cars” or getting greasy. It may actually take some time, but if you talk to her instead of just complain to her when she parks the car in the garage she may understand your reasoning. Remember, women turn their ears off when they think you are going to say something they don’t like. If she doesn’t reason with you, then the only option is the detached garage. Make sure you DOUBLE what ever it is you truly want (and know you can’t afford) and tell her how much it costs. Make SURE you tell her that is the only way to go; it’s the most bang for the buck. When the dollar figures start to compile you will be surprised how well she starts to appreciate you working out of that tiny little garage just to get her the things she wants and needs. Feel free to add in any other options to get anything else you want.


Yes she Probably would respond better if $$$$ was going to be involved.!
 

boiler7904

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Good one Larz - I need to try that at my house. She was complaining about dirt being tracked in from the garage to the laundry room the other day. With all of the salt, sand, and cinders on the roads, there is constantly **** falling off the vehicles onto the garage floor.

I put more miles on my truck in one day (90 miles round trip to work + construction site visits) than my wife puts on her car in a week (4 miles round trip to work x 6 days). The weird thing is that her side of the garage has way more dirt on the floor than mine. How does that happen?

I'd love to wash my floor now but it ain't going to happen for a while. It's 9 degrees right now and that's about as warm as it's supposed to get around here for at least 4 or 5 days.
 

1320stang

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Edmond, OK
I saw recently some seals that you glue down to your floor at the bottom of the garage door to help seal it from the elements. It's rubber and a slight bump, if she has one side of the garage, could you not run a strip of this from the front to the rear of the garage to keep the flood to her side?

We don't have the snow on top, but the wheel wells get the nasty 'snow sharks', I ask her to knock them off before driving into the garage, sometimes she does, sometimes she doesn't.
 
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beetroot72

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1320stang said:
I saw recently some seals that you glue down to your floor at the bottom of the garage door to help seal it from the elements. It's rubber and a slight bump, if she has one side of the garage, could you not run a strip of this from the front to the rear of the garage to keep the flood to her side?

We don't have the snow on top, but the wheel wells get the nasty 'snow sharks', I ask her to knock them off before driving into the garage, sometimes she does, sometimes she doesn't.

Ah Yes, the Dreaded "Snow Sharks" we get those as well.
I think I'm going to tell her that some water is leaking through the back wall and into the basement. It's imposible but she doesn't know that. I'll dump some water down there (right next to her box of work-out videos she never touches) and tell her it is getting moldy!

That'll show her!:angel:
 
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beetroot72

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Larz said:
You're going about it from the wrong angle. It has to benefit her for the garage floor to be kept clean. Try this:
Honey, I just want to keep the garage floor clean so the nastiness doesn't get tracked in on the floor. You work so hard to keep the house clean, and I want to do my part.

Try it and report back to us!!!:beer:

In from the garage we have a "Mud room" with this huge industrial floor mat from Costco. It almost seems to vaccuum you off as you enter. You have to use a Shop-Vac to clean it though.

But No tracking through our house.
 
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heres what you do...Tell her that dusting off the snow is like you wiping your feet.........If she dont dust.you dont wipe,and everything is ok as long as she has a good mop and bucket in the garage that she will use to mop up her water.
 

chopper103in

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sycamore,il
put the caddy on her side about 4ft from the wall up on jack stands and pull the wheels off and leave it
put your truck on the other side
 
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PAToyota

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I think (as mentioned) it comes down to respect. You abide by her rules of keeping the house clean - she abides by your rules to keep the garage clean. Saying "it's just a garage" shows disrespect towards you and your space... Not saying she intends that, but she has to understand where you are coming from.
 
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beetroot72

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PAToyota said:
I think (as mentioned) it comes down to respect. You abide by her rules of keeping the house clean - she abides by your rules to keep the garage clean. Saying "it's just a garage" shows disrespect towards you and your space... Not saying she intends that, but she has to understand where you are coming from.

Yes, respect is right! She is slowly starting to realize that I mean business. I think she thought I was just looking for something to ***** about.

I kindly reminded her that that was her job.:bitchslap
 

Junkman

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Hell........after you are married for 35 years, you will just learn to ignore her... turn off the hearing aid and all is well. My wife gave me grief about the garage 25 years ago when we built the house, saying that she claimed one bay in the garage. Her car hasn't spent one night in my garage in 25 years, and she is still complaining about it. She will get over it one of these decades I assume, but until then............
 

bobthecop

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Buy a squeegie, and a pair of rubber boots. Cuz when momma aint happy aint nobody happy. Or you could, after she has pulled in the garage, go back out, back her vehicle out and brush it off and pull it back in the garage.
 

Junkman

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bobthecop said:
Buy a squeegie, and a pair of rubber boots. Cuz when momma aint happy aint nobody happy. Or you could, after she has pulled in the garage, go back out, back her vehicle out and brush it off and pull it back in the garage.

and he could wash and wax it at the same time, then take it to the local station and fill it with gas. He could also go out the next morning 15 minutes before she leaves and warm it up for her. Don't forget to back it in so she doesn't have any difficulty getting out the door....
 

wilbilt

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KingPerformance said:
I actually aligned the car with all the "tools" in it so it would stop wearing the tires funny.

That is an excellent procedure for any vehicle that is normally operated "loaded". Funny how a lot of people can't grasp the concept.

Back to the wife...you guys are all operating under the assumption that women think logically. They don't.

Maybe a few do, but most I have known do not make any decisions based on logic. Trying to convince her that brushing the snow off before entering the garage is the logical thing to do because it is one thing that takes only a minute, but will save much more time later cleaning up the mess, yada yada...is destined for failure.

It's perfectly logical, but women are biologically resistant to logic. You might do better to find an emotionally-based reason for it. I don't know exactly what you could come up with, but something along the lines of "When I see that mess on the floor after all the work I do to keep the place nice, it makes me feel like nobody appreciates me around here"..etc.

I may be a little off-base because we don't have snow here (or a garage lol), but I have been married to the same woman for 21 years.

Best of luck.:beer:
 

Down Under Bloke

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Junkman said:
and he could wash and wax it at the same time, then take it to the local station and fill it with gas. He could also go out the next morning 15 minutes before she leaves and warm it up for her. Don't forget to back it in so she doesn't have any difficulty getting out the door....


Gee-whiz, Junkman you really know how to look after ladies :wtf: You know after that comment, you have just made life more difficult for all the rest of us :lol_hitti
 

wilbilt

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Down Under Bloke said:
Gee-whiz, Junkman you really know how to look after ladies :wtf: You know after that comment, you have just made life more difficult for all the rest of us :lol_hitti


:lol_hitti :lol_hitti :lol_hitti :lol_hitti (covering my monitor so the wife doesn't see...)
 

Down Under Bloke

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My 2c

Yep you are wrong, you are wrong about this and you are wrong about everything. You are wrong because you are male. :lol_hitti

You are also dumb like all males, because we always forgot we are wrong. If only we could remember and accept it, imagine how much better our lives would be.:beer:
 

wilbilt

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Down Under Bloke said:
My 2c

Yep you are wrong, you are wrong about this and you are wrong about everything. You are wrong because you are male.

But that is not logical, as logic will not prove that point. Since there is no proof in the flawed logic that (male) = (wrong), males will not accept that conclusion.

Since there is proof in the logic that (failure to brush off the snow) = (large expenditures of time and energy to deal with the results), it is an acceptable conclusion for males.:beer:

The wife won't even listen long enough to explain it.:dunno:
 
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beetroot72

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Well Guys, (and Gals)

I told my wife about the thread! She thought it was amusing and took it all pretty well. Except where I posted an "I'm with stupid" sign referring to her.:lol_hitti

She'll go as far as leaving it out for me to brush off....hey it's a step!
But we've be getting hit with a lot of little snow showers and I'm already getting sick of brushing off her DAMN car....Time to push a little harder.:evil:

I'm thinking about a power washer for next year.
 

KingPerformance

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beetroot72 said:
Well Guys, (and Gals)

I told my wife about the thread! She thought it was amusing and took it all pretty well. Except where I posted an "I'm with stupid" sign referring to her.:lol_hitti

She'll go as far as leaving it out for me to brush off....hey it's a step!
But we've be getting hit with a lot of little snow showers and I'm already getting sick of brushing off her DAMN car....Time to push a little harder.:evil:

I'm thinking about a power washer for next year.

Chinese water torture?:lol_hitti
 

boiler7904

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beetroot72 said:
Well Guys, (and Gals)

I told my wife about the thread! She thought it was amusing and took it all pretty well. Except where I posted an "I'm with stupid" sign referring to her.:lol_hitti

She'll go as far as leaving it out for me to brush off....hey it's a step!
But we've be getting hit with a lot of little snow showers and I'm already getting sick of brushing off her DAMN car....Time to push a little harder.:evil:

I'm thinking about a power washer for next year.

If you're getting light fluffy snow like I have been the last couple of weeks, try an leaf blower preferrably with a low speed setting. I watched a guy clearing snow off of cars at a dealership that way. Went amazing fast and got all of the snow off. It also doesn't use the accumulated road salt like an abrasive when you brush it off. Just make sure you keep the wind direction in mind when doing this. Blowing snow into the wind will not make you happy.
 

russlaferrera

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beetroot72 said:
Well Guys, (and Gals)

I told my wife about the thread! She thought it was amusing and took it all pretty well. Except where I posted an "I'm with stupid" sign referring to her.:lol_hitti

She'll go as far as leaving it out for me to brush off....hey it's a step!
But we've be getting hit with a lot of little snow showers and I'm already getting sick of brushing off her DAMN car....Time to push a little harder.:evil:

I'm thinking about a power washer for next year.
YOU AGREED to brush the van off!!

Some advice. Be a man. When you are wrong, admit you are wrong. When you are right, SHUT UP! hahaha...russ
 

wilbilt

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Flush-mounted, heated, popup sprinklers installed in the driveway? Activated with a keyfob remote?

It could work....
 

wrigh003

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Birmingham, AL
Rig one of those huge hairdryer contraptions like they have on gas station carwashes to the door, so when it opens, warm air blows over the car at 300mph. That should take care of it. AND you'll never wonder if your wife's home again, the huge roaring dryer/snowblower should let you know. All you'd have to do then is teach her to creep into the garage at <1mph so the snow gets blown back out the door.

:lol_hitti
 
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