As a result of the dramatic increase in women's participation in the work force, more relationship therapists are seeing couples who are dissatisfied with how domestic labor is divided in their homes. Although, this issue may seem therapeutically straightforward, there are many aspects which make its renegotiation surprisingly problematic and complex. This article is an effort to delineate some of these issues such as engaging men in therapy, exploring emotional issues connected with housework, and the mechanism of gatekeeping. Also included is a therapeutic framework for addressing client concerns about domestic responsibilities. KEY WORDS: family therapy; domestic labor; husband involvement; dual-income couples. The past two decades have witnessed widespread changes in familial roles, evidenced most prominently, perhaps, by the substantial increase in the percentage of married mothers in the work force. Despite this, research shows that wives are still performing the great bulk of domestic labor (
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