The Fair Play Deck: A Couple's Conversation Deck for Prioritizing What's Important
H**S
Very useful
Gift for husband to open much needed communication. Got to talk about something I've been trying to clear up for 7 years with these. Highly recommend!
S**H
Helpful!
Helped me and my partner recognize what each other is doing. Also great for us when I went back to work after being a stay at home mom to re divide how we run our house. Easy enough to understand if you haven’t read the book.
H**N
Fair Play Deck: Great Conversation Starter for Daily/Weekly Chores ★★★★★
Making a game of tedious tasks is always a good strategy. This deck has it's pros and cons, but the pros definitely outweigh the cons. It's a great way to start a conversation about the distribution of work in a household. Communication is key, and no one wants to feel criticized or as if they're not contributing enough. It's so easy to feel like a failure when simple chores are left unfinished because no one takes up the task in a timely manner, leaving an issue area like a few dishes or dust bunnies to grow into an overwhelming task. With these cards divided up, there's no question about who is doing what and when. It suddenly becomes clear just how much each person is taking on, and if anything, helps everyone appreciate the mutual effort of keeping things running smoothly.It's still often the case that the "mental load" of a household falls on women. As an article from Forbes on this very subject puts it: "It’s having to remember to pick up eggs. Even if you ask someone else to buy eggs, it’s you then checking that the eggs were in fact bought. It’s essentially project management. And when it’s at work, that’s what we call it. Project management. Or just management. It’s a whole job. Yet when it’s at home, we call it, well, we don’t really have a word for it." The micro-tasks that stack up throughout any given day shouldn't fall to one person or one gender in a household, and this deck attempts to even that playing field.Pros:★Conversation starter (positive communication is key)★Making a game of tedious tasks is always a good strategy★Assist in the even distribution of household work and "mental load"★Make clear who is doing what and when in a household★Foster appreciation between members of a householdCons:★More couple-centric versus family-centric or household-centric★Many cards (almost half of the deck) for child rearing (these can just be pulled from the deck and kept in the box for childless households). Maybe a future installment of these cards could be further divided, so the child rearing cards can actually be expanded upon and purchased separately. This would make the set more approachable for different households and living arrangements, other than a nuclear family.★★★★★
B**N
Great Potential
I was so excited to receive this product once it was available, and I read through the cards then shared them with a friend right away. But it has been sitting on my counter unused for the past year. There are so many task cards to go through and discuss with a partner, and I love the potential conversations it would bring up, but we have never used it. Maybe that says more about us than about the product.
K**A
My life is sooo much better!
It’s been about a week since my husband and I went through this together and SHEESH! Why didn’t we do this sooner??? My life has totally changed (for the better) since we shuffled and worked to reseal this deck of cards for our household responsibilities. I especially love that the person helping a card should see the task all the way through…no half or splitting. If you are having a hard time organizing your household, buy this immediately!
A**R
Big cards, very little information
These cards were a disappointment. They are big- think tarot cards rather than playing cards. That would be perfect if the cards included all the great information about conception, planning, and execution available on the Fair Play website. But they're comically large considering they contain no real information. It feels like a missed opportunity. I'm already doing the labor of reading the book and convincing my husband to "play" this game with me. I was hoping these cards would take over the hard job of explaining each task. It's less of a "conversation" deck and more of an opportunity for me to talk at my husband about all of this- again. Now I have to add "dropping these cards off to return" to my to-do list.
D**.
Valuable tool for reducing relationship stress & improving communication
I'm a clinical psychologist who studies stress in families, so I am very familiar with the problems these cards are helping to solve-- uneven division of labor, poor communication, nagging, and resentment. I recommend these cards to all friends + family who are struggling to find a more equitable way to manage their household. A few things I really like about them:--They make invisible labor visible. Yes, there are cards for the obvious daily grind tasks, like dishes and laundry. But there's also a tooth fairy card ("Magical Beings"), a card for thank you notes, maintaining adult friendships-- so much of the behind-the-scenes work that keeps a household humming but goes unrecognized and unacknowledged. When you have a task on a physical card that you can hold in your hand, it helps make these kinds of tasks concrete to both partners.--There's an upside for both partners. These cards aren't just a clever way to trick your partner into doing more chores. As Rodsky stresses in her book (which I *highly* recommend reading before deploying the cards), this system isn't just focused on the sheer number of tasks that each person does, but in making sure that each partner feels total ownership of the tasks they take on. So there's less cross-talk, redundant effort, and less of a need for partners to check up on each other. In short, less nagging. When you take on a whole task- conception, planning, AND execution- it is more satisfying and meaningful, and it gives your other partner the freedom to trust you and not feel compelled to micromanage. The cards aren't really for score-keeping, but for improving communication and accountability between partners.--The cards are fun! Household labor is usually not all that enjoyable, and it's a common area of conflict for couples. The "gamification" aspect of these cards takes a topic that is often a bitter slog, and make it feel playful.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago