One of my cartoons that was published in The Sun on 9 June 2001.
The scene is set in a marriage guidance office: the counsellor sits at his desk facing the husband, while the wife’s chair beside him is conspicuously empty. The counsellor says: “Actually, when I said treat her like a woman, I didn’t mean send her out to wash-up the cups!”
The humour works on a few levels. First, it plays on the well-known phrase “treat her like a woman,” which ordinarily implies respect, attention, and emotional care. In the cartoon it’s twisted to suggest the husband misheard - or misapplied - the advice, turning it into housework.
The gap between intended meaning and literal action makes the joke land.
Second, placing the line in a professional counselling setting sharpens the contrast: advice is supposed to be wise and considered, but here it’s applied naively and absurdly.
It’s a funny, gentle poke at stereotypes and miscommunication in relationships.
If you liked this post, you might enjoy “Don’t Confuse Your Internet Search with Research” or “On the Face of It”.

Great cartoons, I like the relate ones especially!!
ReplyDeleteLeah
Leah - I have more "Relate" cartoons than anything else! Shortly, this will look like a Relate blog only...
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