- Joined
- Feb 9, 2013
Chris doesn't think he can survive on just the tugboat. He thinks he needs a household and without the familial obligation Barb has toward Chris, Chris thinks he needs to justify his contribution to the household in some way.Theory #2: Chris is just lazy. He doesn't understand how much work being a stay at home mom is and thinks it would be easier than getting a job.
Since he has his tugboat and doesn't really understand how money works anyway, there's no reason why not getting a job needs to entail being a housewife. He could always just stay unemployed and keep playing vidya. Chris isn't a girl with no skills who decides to get married and have kids because she has no way to support herself. This is something he actively wants.
Since Chris has been more into the tomgirl stuff, the househusband idea hasn't come up at all. Crystal isn't that important either. He's OK with her being born by strangers. (Sperm donation.) He just wants to get Crystal's birth over with because it was foretold. Once that's done, he wants to get a sex change.My theory: Chris is profoundly lonely and thinks being a housewife would solve his problems.
If Chris had his ideal world -- a loving wife and baby Crystal -- he would never be lonely. Staying at home on his tugboat with no family except his insane mother, he is incredibly isolated. But if he got a job and moved out of the house, he would have to deal with a world that he perceives as cold, uncaring, and actively prejudiced against autistics. (And lesbian transgenders.) He has never gotten emotional fulfillment by going out and meeting new people. His new church eventually rejected him, the Wallflower rejected him, manajerks kick him out of stores, etc. Being a housewife would allow him to be protected while still having people who were emotionally invested in him around at all times. (He probably also thinks Crystal will be the sweetest girl ever, will never throw tantrums or be bratty, and will always adore her father/mother/tomparent.)
The only things that have been constant are that Chris wants a girlfriend and he doesn't want to do work.
Househusband was invented back when his life was a lot happier. It was before the wallflower and before getting kicked out of the church.
I don't think Chris' feelings of loneliness were the main motivator for househusband. They come up, of course. Chris doesn't like dealing with strangers regularly. But practical issues are more important, and that's why the househusband idea was invented. (Where instead, he could've just had a vague "I'll make it work somehow" idea, which is what his current plan seems to be.)