學(xué)習(xí)啦>學(xué)習(xí)英語(yǔ)>英語(yǔ)閱讀>英語(yǔ)美文欣賞>

雙語(yǔ)情感文章:當(dāng)妻子掙得更多時(shí)

時(shí)間: 燕妮639 分享

  摘錄:不過(guò)這里有個(gè)前提條件:男性們希望自己的收入,從理論上,足以支付家中的日常開(kāi)支。當(dāng)達(dá)不到這個(gè)標(biāo)準(zhǔn)時(shí),他們會(huì)感覺(jué)憤怒、羞愧和暴躁。而他們的妻子往往會(huì)感覺(jué)到不滿(mǎn)和壓力。

  雙語(yǔ)情感文章:當(dāng)妻子掙得更多時(shí)

  I'm one of the 40% of American women, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who are the breadwinners for their families-that is, we earn more than our husbands. Like millions of my sisters, this puts me smack in the middle of a distinctively modern dilemma: how to handle the tensions of a marriage between an alpha woman and a beta man.

  My husband, an antiques restorer whose field has all but evaporated as a result of the recession, does his best to help with chores and child care, while earning enough to pay utilities and car-insurance bills. I'm the one who works an octopus-armed 12- to 14-hour day, often seven days a week. When I finally come to bed, I'm depleted and vibrating with anxiety.

  根據(jù)美國(guó)勞工統(tǒng)計(jì)局(Bureau of Labor Statistics)的數(shù)據(jù),美國(guó)有40%的女性是家中的頂梁柱──也就是說(shuō),她們的收入比自己的丈夫要高。而我就是這40%中的一員。如同我那數(shù)百萬(wàn)名女性同胞一樣,這讓我陷入了當(dāng)代社會(huì)獨(dú)有的一個(gè)困境之中:該如何面對(duì)夫妻之間因女強(qiáng)男弱而帶來(lái)的緊張關(guān)系。

  我先生是一位古董修復(fù)師,而由于經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退,他這個(gè)行當(dāng)幾乎是全軍覆沒(méi)了。我先生掙來(lái)的錢(qián)足夠支付水電煤氣的費(fèi)用,以及我們的汽車(chē)保險(xiǎn)費(fèi),與此同時(shí),他還在盡力幫著做家務(wù)和照顧孩子。我是家中那個(gè)每天像八爪魚(yú)似的工作12到14個(gè)小時(shí)而且往往一周要工作七天的人。終于能上床睡覺(jué)時(shí),我總是筋疲力盡,心中還充滿(mǎn)了焦慮。

  We're hardly alone. Over the past couple of years, articles and books have declared that the end of men is nigh and that female alphas are surging. The husbands of these hard-charging women have largely been painted either as stay-at-home slacker dudes who play videogames (while their toddlers pee on the rug for the third time that day) or saint-like dads who supportively cook, clean and run errands, to say nothing of handling doctors' appointments and homework assignments.

  我們并不是特例。過(guò)去幾年間,不少文章和書(shū)籍都曾宣稱(chēng),男性主導(dǎo)的時(shí)代行將結(jié)束,強(qiáng)勢(shì)的女性正在崛起。躲在那些沖鋒陷陣女性背后的男士們大多被描述成兩類(lèi):要么是宅在家里整天打游戲的懶鬼(而這時(shí)候他們蹣跚學(xué)步的孩子卻一天之內(nèi)第三次尿在了地毯上),要么就是圣人一般偉大的爸爸,全力支持妻子,會(huì)做飯、打掃房間、跑腿做雜事,更不用說(shuō)處理跟醫(yī)生預(yù)約以及幫著孩子完成家庭作業(yè)這類(lèi)事情了。

  Such portraits are exaggerated, of course, and represent the extremes of a continuum. Perhaps because men of this generation were raised in the wake of the women's movement, a culture that introduced values of equality, many of them don't seem to have a problem with their wives earning more than they do.

  當(dāng)然,這類(lèi)描述都有些夸張,只代表了普羅大眾中的極端特例?;蛟S由于這一代男性是在女權(quán)運(yùn)動(dòng)(女權(quán)運(yùn)動(dòng)起到了啟蒙平等價(jià)值觀的作用)發(fā)生之后長(zhǎng)大的,因此他們中的許多人對(duì)于妻子掙得比自己多這樣的事情并不介意。

  There's one caveat, though: The men want their own salaries alone to be enough, in theory, to float the family. When they can't meet this standard, they can feel enraged, shamed, explosive. And their wives often feel resentful and pressured.

  不過(guò)這里有個(gè)前提條件:男性們希望自己的收入,從理論上,足以支付家中的日常開(kāi)支。當(dāng)達(dá)不到這個(gè)標(biāo)準(zhǔn)時(shí),他們會(huì)感覺(jué)憤怒、羞愧和暴躁。而他們的妻子往往會(huì)感覺(jué)到不滿(mǎn)和壓力。

  'I don't think so much about gender roles, but I do feel angry and helpless because I can't financially support the family unit,' says Greg McFadden, 39, an actor and stay-at-home dad, whose wife, Shannon Hummel, 38, serves as breadwinner (they have one child, age 6). She works as a teacher and as artistic director of a Brooklyn dance company. 'I'm sick of reading these articles and daddy blogs, about how 'empowered' men are to be caretakers. Ask them how they feel about not earning a paycheck.'

  現(xiàn)年39歲的格雷格?麥克法登(Greg McFadden)是一位演員,也是一位居家父親,他38歲的妻子香農(nóng)?赫梅爾(Shannon Hummel)是養(yǎng)家的主力(他們有一個(gè)孩子,今年六歲)。香農(nóng)是一位老師,同時(shí)在布魯克林一家舞蹈公司任藝術(shù)總監(jiān)。格雷格說(shuō),“我不是特別介意性別角色,不過(guò)由于我不能從財(cái)力上支撐一個(gè)家,我的確會(huì)感覺(jué)懊惱無(wú)助。我煩透了那些爸爸們寫(xiě)的男性在照顧家庭方面如何‘強(qiáng)大’之類(lèi)的文章和博客了,問(wèn)問(wèn)他們掙不到錢(qián)什么感覺(jué)吧。”

  How many families are in this situation? It depends a lot on income level. An April report by the Center for American Progress looked at U.S. women who earn as much or more than their husbands and found that 34% of wives in families with incomes in the top 20% are the breadwinners, whereas 70% of those in the bottom 20% are. Roughly half of wives are the breadwinners in middle-income families.

  有多少美國(guó)家庭處于這種狀況?這很大程度上取決于收入水平。美國(guó)進(jìn)步中心(Center for American Progress)今年4月份發(fā)表了一份關(guān)于收入水平與丈夫相同或者更高女性的報(bào)告。這份報(bào)告顯示,家庭收入位列全美前20%的家庭中,女性是養(yǎng)家主力的比例是34%,而在家庭收入最低的20%家庭中,女性收入較高的比例是70%。對(duì)于中等收入家庭而言,女性為養(yǎng)家主力的比例大約是一半。

  The emotional dynamic between these women and their husbands also varies greatly, depending on family circumstances. In a recent poll of 400 female breadwinners conducted by the women's financial media site DailyWorth.com, only 22% of wives without children felt a negative impact on their marriages. But it was a different story for women with children-36% felt their higher earnings had a negative effect.

  由于家庭環(huán)境不同,女性和她們丈夫之間的情感互動(dòng)狀況也大不相同。女性理財(cái)網(wǎng)站DailyWorth.com近來(lái)對(duì)400位作為養(yǎng)家主力的女性進(jìn)行了一項(xiàng)調(diào)查,結(jié)果顯示,其中沒(méi)有孩子的女性中,只有22%的人感覺(jué)她們的婚姻受到了負(fù)面影響。不過(guò)對(duì)于有孩子的女性來(lái)說(shuō),則完全是另外一回事兒了,其中36%的人感覺(jué)比丈夫收入高對(duì)她們的婚姻產(chǎn)生了負(fù)面影響。

  An obvious sore spot with many husbands in such marriages is the reversal of traditional gender roles. In San Diego, former airline-shuttle operator Conan Cott, the husband of U.S. Navy computer-systems and organization specialist Michele Cott, has been caring for the couple's 4-year-old twins since they were born. While Conan says 'it is great to be able to see my children grow and learn,' his role as keeper of the home rankles. 'The lawn needs to be watered, the cat box is stinky, there are dirty socks in the living room, silverware in the grass out back, and I can't get those children to get to bed at 7:30 no matter how hard I try,' he says.

  對(duì)于處于這樣婚姻狀況的許多男性而言,一個(gè)顯然不能觸碰的痛處在于,傳統(tǒng)的性別角色被顛倒了。圣地亞哥前機(jī)場(chǎng)大巴司機(jī)科南?科特(Conan Cott)自孩子出生起就一直在家照顧他們現(xiàn)如今已經(jīng)四歲的一對(duì)雙胞胎??颇系钠拮用仔獱?科特(Michele Cott)是美國(guó)海軍電腦系統(tǒng)和組織方面的專(zhuān)家。雖然科南說(shuō),“能夠看著我的孩子們一天天成長(zhǎng)并學(xué)會(huì)新東西,這很棒。”不過(guò)管家的角色卻讓他有些頭痛,他說(shuō),“草地該澆水了,貓砂已經(jīng)臭烘烘的了,臥室里到處都是臭襪子,銀餐具丟在外面的草地上,而不管我多努力,都沒(méi)辦法在7:30前讓孩子們上床睡覺(jué)。”

  Michele says, 'I hear myself saying things that the stereotypical husband says, and he replies with the stereotypical wife response. All of this puts immense pressure on our marriage.'

  米歇爾說(shuō),“我聽(tīng)見(jiàn)自己在說(shuō)著那些典型的丈夫們說(shuō)的話(huà),而他的回答也是典型的妻子們的回答。所有這些都讓我們的婚姻承受著巨大的壓力。”

  In New York City, Matthew Perry works part-time while his wife M.P. has a high-paying office job as an editor. Matthew feels taken for granted and professionally trapped in the way that many contemporary stay-at-home moms often do. 'M.P. doesn't have to worry about having to cover child care here and there. It's always me who has to subtract from my work day,' he says.

  住在紐約市的馬修?佩里(Matthew Perry)從事兼職工作,而他的妻子M.P.是一位拿著高薪的編輯。如同許多當(dāng)代的居家媽媽那樣,馬修感覺(jué)自己在職業(yè)方面陷入了困境。他說(shuō),“M.P.不必為如何照顧孩子而操心。不得不從工作中分心出來(lái)的那個(gè)人總是我。”

  Pressure eases up-and perceptions seem to change-when husbands' salaries are enough to support the family should the wives' pay evaporate. That's the case with public-relations executive Alison Risso, 39, who makes twice as much as her husband, Jon, a civil engineer; their children are aged 6 and 8. The way Jon sees it, he and his wife want different things from their careers but share the same family goals and values.

  若是丈夫的薪酬足以在妻子沒(méi)有收入的情況下支撐起這個(gè)家,那么壓力會(huì)緩和許多,而且雙方的看法似乎也會(huì)不一樣。艾莉森?瑞索(Alison Risso)一家就是這種情況。今年39歲的艾莉森是一位負(fù)責(zé)公關(guān)業(yè)務(wù)的高層管理者,她的收入是她做土木工程師的丈夫喬恩(Jon)的兩倍。他們有兩個(gè)孩子,一個(gè)六歲,一個(gè)八歲。在喬恩看來(lái),他和妻子只是在職業(yè)道路上所追求的目標(biāo)有所不同,但倆人在家庭目標(biāo)和價(jià)值觀上是一致的。

  'I'm not the ambitious type like Alison, so I'm happy for her to make more money because there is no pressure on me to have to work my way up the ladder to become vice president,' Jon says. Plus, less executive responsibility translates into more flexibility to work on a family-friendly schedule. He is home on time to pick the children up from school and cook dinner, since Alison is rarely back from the office before 7 p.m.

  喬恩說(shuō),“我不像艾莉森那么雄心勃勃,因此她掙錢(qián)更多我也很開(kāi)心,因?yàn)檫@樣我就沒(méi)有壓力了,不必非要去奮力拼搏當(dāng)上副總裁不可了。”另外,工作上少一些管理方面的職責(zé)意味著可以有更靈活的時(shí)間安排來(lái)處理家中的事情。由于艾莉森很少在晚上七點(diǎn)前從辦公室回來(lái),喬恩便會(huì)準(zhǔn)時(shí)回家接孩子放學(xué)、做晚飯。

  As for the Brooklyn couple Shannon and Greg, they've arrived at a workable, if sometimes shaky, arrangement. She acknowledges that she has to be better at appreciating Greg's difficulties in juggling both child care and unpredictable work. But she also insisted that she needs a vacation. 'I want to go away for two weeks in the summer, and that means that to swing it, we're house-swapping and cooking all our own food,' she says. 'But it's worth it. That reward needs to be there, or the whole thing falls apart.'

  至于上文提到過(guò)的布魯克林的香農(nóng)和格雷格,他們已經(jīng)做出了一個(gè)可行的安排,盡管這安排也許不一定奏效。香農(nóng)承認(rèn)她必須給予格雷格更多的理解,體諒他一邊照料孩子一邊面對(duì)不穩(wěn)定的工作時(shí)的辛苦。不過(guò)她也堅(jiān)持說(shuō),自己需要一個(gè)假期。她說(shuō),“今年夏天我想離開(kāi)兩周,這意味著會(huì)有些變化,我們會(huì)和別人交換住房,然后全部自己做飯吃。不過(guò),這樣做也值得。需要有些獎(jiǎng)勵(lì),否則整個(gè)家可能會(huì)都垮掉。”

  Greg says, 'When you reach philosophical agreement, it does help melt away resentment. But even though we're on the same page, we're not really there yet. It's a work in progress.'

  格雷格說(shuō),“當(dāng)你們豁達(dá)地取得了一致,這的確有助于緩解各自的怨恨情緒。不過(guò)盡管我們的想法達(dá)成了大體一致,但我們尚未真正做到。我們還在努力中。”

221129