I read an article about the recently published book The Arthur Miller Tapes: A Life in His Own Words, based upon recorded conversations Arthur Miller had with his friend and biographer Christopher Bigsby. Of course the article picked out the aspects which related to his brief marriage with Marilyn Monroe, and I’m sure we can all hear Miller audibly sigh that what he had to say wasn’t enough unless it relates to her.
Nevertheless, his comments about Monroe were interesting, specifically that she had literally no internal resources and needed a partner who would never criticize her. And he was well placed, indeed, to understand Monroe’s complex relationship with self-confidence, as he admits having questioned his ability to write throughout his life, even after the enormous success of Death of a Salesman, confirming that only a small fraction of his work was made publicly available.
But what I found particularly notable was that during their four year marriage, he states he’d not been able to produce one iota of work. He commented that even if she hadn’t changed her mind about the marriage, he would’ve chosen to end it, because he couldn’t work anymore.
It made me ask: is this another tale of a woman with vulnerabilities being considered inappropriately needy, possibly even hysterical (because she took drugs to prop herself up), while her husband is the put upon genius whose creative juices were being drained by having her in his life? Don’t get me wrong, I suspect it was nigh on impossible for anyone to make Monroe feel safe and secure enough to shine in her own right, but this depiction of their relationship as somehow vampiric in nature on her part, is pretty brutal – especially when Miller admits the dramatic success of Death of a Salesman contributed to the breakdown of his first marriage because his “horizon suddenly opened up into all kinds of other ways of expressing my dominance.” Hmmm…
We’ve all heard the saying “behind every successful man there is a woman” which, while clearly refencing the fact that ambitious men need a particular kind of wife, is nevertheless speaking in a condescending manner to the woman. For this kind of woman is one who, even when clever and talented themselves, is willing to make their lives secondary to his, to manage life so it does not interfere with his ability to maximise every opportunity, to remove all need for him to involve himself in the mundane and the drudge.
There’s a section in Michelle Obama’s first book Becoming about their early years together where she speaks about Barack routinely taking time to go to the gym on the way home from work, without giving any thought to her wishing to do likewise. Now Barack Obama is no Pete Hegseth and, sadly this was the norm. It took Michelle to wake up and smell the coffee herself about the inequity, before ensuring he did too. And who would question that Michelle had to make decisions about her own career in order that her husband could reach the highest of peaks.
In a world where “wife work” is a term which needs no clarification (not to wives anyway), how do talented and clever women get to marry and have children, while carving out a career for themselves? How many husbands are willing to put their careers on pause to provide the type of support which would be normally expected of a wife? Or is it only possible if they hire a “wife” (or series of wives) to provide the support network which is needed to allow both husband and wife to shine in their chosen careers?
My friend is a clever and talented women who had a seriously high powered job, earning a 6-figure salary some 20 years ago. Or she did until her daughter was born. Then, despite her being the significantly more senior and higher earner, her husband was not willing to make any adjustment to support her continued professional ascent. When the marriage (unsurprisingly) broke down, she changed career for something less high earning, but which allowed her to be an active parent to their daughter. Compare this with her brother, who was equally clever and talented and high earning, yet married a woman who had no interest in being anything other than a stay-at-home wife. She was clever and talented, but not ambitious in any way for herself, and supported his climb to the top, to have a career which involved him being entirely wrapped up in his private jet type of business world. They now have multiple million pound homes and are rich enough to have been granted Swiss nationality. Contrast that with my friend who, while having a lovely home she built it herself, ownership of it was only possible via her brother’s financial generosity.
To be honest, I don’t really have a question – this is more in the way of a rant. My final thought on this is whenever I hear feminists insisting that God is a woman… all I can say, where are you going with that? Explain to me why you’d believe She’d load the dice so heavily in favour of the opposite gender?
I’d love to hear your thoughts either on any of these scenarios, or any other gender related topic.
© Debs Carey, 2026
ok. where to start. Great post. personally, before we had my daughter I out earned my husband. I chose to be a stay at home and support my husband’s career because I don’t believe in the concept of having it all. no regrets at all. Scarlet Johanson, fabulously sussessful with a husband who is not quite as successful as she is recently said she has given herself grace regarding parenting because you can’t have it all. I have seen couples with two extraordinarily successful adults who never seem happy, nor do their kids. when both people are successful, what are the trade offs? why do women often sacrifice their success? I think that’s a case by case basis. there’s definitely some long held beliefs that women take care of the home, gather, and men make the money, hunt. Instagram will show you that women put pressure on other women to present a perfect home life. we continue to do that. I don’t see that stopping.In the case of Marilyn and Arthur, their chance of having a successful relationship with each other or themselves was slim. Can narcissists or egoists ever have a functional relationship? I know I’ve gone around the block here, but just some thoughts
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So basically Miller couldn’t write during the time where he had to serve as both the emotional support and executive function for his partner? And he wrote his most successful play when he had a wife who fulfilled both of those functions for HIM? And yet his takeaway was that when he was successful due to that wife, he ditched her once that success broadened his horizons? Men are such hypocritical, willfully blind twats.
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I think I might just say this: I find men useful for some things, not much but sometimes I can’t life a heavy piece of furniture or a car tire. Other than that I can really get along perfectly fine without them in my life 🙂 I also think Autumn’s last sentence sums things up nicely.
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Good hell…looking at the above comments, I feel like I should just slink away to a quiet corner somewhere. This is why I don’t like generalities. We’re not all like that!
Interestingly, one of the CheeseGov senior leaders–he’s only been on the job about a year–is unexpectedly retiring. Turns out he’s letting his wife focus on her career while he stays home with the kids. I respect that!
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LA, this is why I find it such a compelling subject, because there are so many blocks to go round – so thank you for expressing a number of them.
One of the things I didn’t include is all those women who decided ahead of giving birth that they’d be returning to work *and happily* because they needed the stimulation, only to find themselves feeling emotionally unable to do so afterwards. Clearly there’s a hormonal aspect, but there’s also an attachment issue.
I also don’t doubt that many mothers-at-the-school-gate aren’t quite as welcoming or accepting of SAH fathers, which can make it a lonely path.
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I felt certain you would join me in my feminist internal rant there Autumn. I’d started reading the article surprised that I found him (in the picture) to be attractive, only for a metaphorical leg crossing to occur after I read that. What an arse!
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Yup Deb, that physical strength can be undeniably useful. If anything were to happen to Himself, I’d happily spend the rest of my days alone. I was in such a hurry to couple up, feeling a failure for not doing so. Himself is literally the least demanding man alive, but it’s like I’ve got some internal people pleaser programming which doesn’t apply when I’m single. With hindsight, I’m better at living fully outside of any relationship.
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Don’t worry Mark, while I purposely didn’t use the #notallmen hashtag, I know that truly is the case. Sadly, there are not enough of good guys to go around, and the balance of good to bad is tipping fast in the current manosphere.
All hail to your CheeseGov colleague. I hope he has a wonderful time and finds ways of making it a rounded and fulfilling experience both as a parent and as a person.
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here’s my personal experience regarding stimulation. when I was a stay at home so many women told me they could never imagine staying home and not having adult stimulation. there comes COVID and those same people who couldn’t wait to work from home
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I think you’re pointing to something real about how these kinds of stories get told, and how quickly they get simplified into one person being the problem.
And your broader point about how support, ambition, and invisible labor get unevenly distributed across relationships feels very real. It shows up in a lot of different ways, not just one dynamic.
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It’s not just men who are capable of being hypocritical, although I tend to give a degree of latitude to those for whom working from home was the only way to manage home schooling and keeping ahold of their jobs. Not saying this was the case in the examples you mention, but it was a factor for so many I knew over here in the UK (of both genders).
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That’s it exactly Kari. The scenarios about which stories are told, for some reason aren’t being examined for nuance and complexity.
And it’s the broader point to which there is no easy solution. I recall having a conversation with a (male) friend who was participating in a study into the male contraceptive pill. But, as he was at pains to point out, how much trust would this require of a women – not just that her man wouldn’t do something willfully, but that he might be a forgetful twit. After all, contraceptive failure has no (physical) impact on him, and all on her. It’s a huge subject and one I’m surprised isn’t often debated.
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