The Wet Towel Was Not the Problem

Yes, summer, with its schedule challenges, constant buzz of activity, extra laundry, and extra carpools can be a challenging time for women. Instead of complaining to him that you’re left to do the extra work—this is a better game plan.

Chani stepped on the wet towel in the hallway and froze.

There were bathing suits dripping over the railing, freeze-pop wrappers stuck to the counter, a sunscreen bottle leaking onto the table, and a child calling, “Ma, what’s for lunch?” even though breakfast had ended forty-five minutes ago.

Somewhere in the house, someone was crying because one of her jacks was missing.

And Chani, who had once imagined summer as slower, softer, maybe even fun, felt her whole body tighten.

Wasn’t summer supposed to be relaxing?

So why did it feel like she was running a hotel, day camp, restaurant, laundry service, and travel agency out of her kitchen?

Why Summer Feels So Much Harder Than It Looks

The travel agency part was the worst.

Vacation. Even the word made her tired.

Chani had browser tabs open for day trips, bungalow rentals, hotel deals, splash pads, indoor activities for rainy days, affordable outings, and “family fun near me that doesn’t cost a fortune.”

Every idea had a problem.

Too expensive. Too far. Too crowded. Too boring for the big kids. Too hard with the little ones. Too complicated with food. Too much packing.

Too much everything.

And then Avi came home. Calm. Pleasant. Normal.

That was almost the most irritating part. His life looked exactly the same.

Winter, spring, summer, fall, he got up, went to shul, went to work, came home, ate supper, took a phone call, learned, and went to sleep.

Meanwhile, Chani’s entire world had been turned upside down.  And somehow, he could not understand why she was so uptight about wet towels.

When He Doesn’t See What You’re Carrying

He walked into the kitchen and saw her standing there with a laundry basket on her hip.

“What happened?” he asked.

Chani gave a short laugh. “What happened? Summer happened.”

Avi looked confused.

She pointed toward the hallway. “There are wet towels everywhere. The kids are totally off schedule. Nobody is sleeping. Everyone needs food every five minutes. We have no vacation plan. Everything is expensive. And you’re walking around like everything is normal.”

He paused. “So tell them to hang up their towels.”

That was it. Tell them to hang up their towels.

Chani stared at him.

Because she was not hearing a practical suggestion.

She was hearing, You’re making a big deal out of nothing.

And suddenly, the towel was not a towel. It was the whole summer.

It was the pressure to create memories while staying on budget. It was the guilt that the kids were bored. It was the endless snacks, late nights, laundry, packing, fighting, planning, and decision-making.

It was the feeling that if she did not think of everything, nothing would happen.

And if she did think of everything, she would be the one carrying it all.

What We Usually Want to Say

Chani wanted to say, “Must I explain why this is stressful?”

She wanted to say, “Do you have any idea how much I’m doing?”

She wanted to say, “Why am I the only one thinking about vacation?”

And honestly, every sentence felt true.

But she had said versions of that before, and they never landed the way she hoped.

Avi would get defensive. Or quiet. Or practical. Or hurt.

Then she would feel even more alone.

What To Do Instead

So this time, Chani did something small.

Not dramatic or spiritual-looking. Not even especially impressive.

She put down the laundry basket and took one breath.

And instead of explaining the entire emotional history of summer, she asked herself one question:

What do I actually want?

At first, all she could hear was irritation.

I want people to stop making messes.

I want him to notice.

I want someone else to think for once.

But underneath all that, there was something simpler.

She was tired. She wanted help. She wanted one piece of summer to feel manageable.

So she said, quietly, “I would love to go on one simple outing this week.”

No lecture. No, “because I plan everything around here.”

Just the desire.

Make the Desire Simple

Avi looked at her.

She waited.

After a minute, he said, “Okay. What were you thinking?”

That question could have opened another browser tab in her brain.

She could have listed every option, every price, every reason nothing worked.

Instead, she said, “I’m not sure. I would just love something easy.”

Avi nodded.

“Maybe we can do something local one afternoon,” he said. “A spray park and a picnic supper.”

It was not a dream vacation.

But Chani exhaled.

Because for the first time all day, she felt a tiny bit less alone.

She had not handed Avi a complaint.

She had handed him a small blueprint for making her happier.

It was not perfect.

But it was different. And in marriage, different matters.

Why This Works Better Than Complaining

Sometimes the hardest part of summer is not the mess.

It is the meaning we attach to the mess.

I am alone.

Nobody sees me.

His life stays normal while mine falls apart.

That story is exhausting. And once it starts playing, even a wet towel can feel like an insult.

But a simple desire changes the conversation.

“I would love a quiet walk after the kids are asleep.” 

“I would love to order pizza tonight.”

“I would love help cleaning up before bedtime.” 

A desire is not a guarantee. It does not mean everyone will cheerfully cooperate.

It does not mean the towels will magically disappear, or the vacation will plan itself.

But it gives the people around us something much easier to respond to than resentment.

Try This the Next Time You Feel Yourself Snapping

Before you explain, defend, complain, or prove how much you are carrying, pause and ask yourself:

What do I actually want?

Then say it as simply as possible.

“I would love an early bedtime tonight.” 

“I would love to go out for ice cream.”

“I would love extra cleaning help.”

Summer may still be messy. The kids may still be off schedule. The finances may still be tight.

And yes, there may still be wet towels on the floor.

But one softer sentence can change the whole feeling in the room. 

And in the middle of summer, that can feel like fresh air. 

A small reminder that even in the chaos of summer, you do not have to lose yourself or your connection to him.

If this summer has brought out the worst in you, it does not mean something is wrong with you or your marriage.

It may simply mean you are carrying more than anyone can see.

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Zakah Glaser, Certified Laura Doyle Relationship Coach

Zakah Glaser is a Certified Relationship Coach who helps women bring more peace, warmth, and connection into their marriages through small, practical shifts that can transform the atmosphere at home without dragging their husbands to therapy.
She offers private coaching, group coaching, and complimentary Marriage Breakthrough Sessions for women who want to feel more cherished, supported, and emotionally connected in their marriages.
You can book a free Marriage Breakthrough Session here, visit her website, or email her at info@shalombayisagency.com. You can also join her free WhatsApp group for short daily inspirational messages here.

2 responses to “The Wet Towel Was Not the Problem”

  1. Chavi S Avatar
    Chavi S

    OMG wow, describing my life!!! This was so super on target and helpful!!

    1. Zakah Glaser Avatar

      Chavi, I’m so glad it felt so relatable and gave you something helpful to take away. Zakah

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