Every year, right around early November, something subtle starts happening. Grocery stores begin stacking towers of canned pumpkin and cranberry sauce near the entrance. Pinterest fills with tablescapes that look like they were styled by professional photographers who have never actually hosted a dinner for twelve people. And somewhere in the background, almost like muscle memory, women everywhere start quietly calculating how much work the holidays are going to be.
I notice it in myself every year.
At first it’s just a passing thought while standing in the grocery store aisle. Do I still have that big roasting pan? Then another thought arrives while scrolling through recipes online. Maybe I should try making the stuffing from scratch this time. A few days later I’m mentally inventorying my kitchen cabinets and wondering if I should start planning the menu already.
None of this is particularly dramatic. It’s just the slow, familiar rhythm of the holiday season beginning again. But if you pause long enough to look at it honestly, there’s something quietly exhausting about the whole process.
Because for many women, the holidays don’t just mean celebration. They mean planning, shopping, prepping, cooking, hosting, cleaning, and making sure everyone else has a wonderful time.
And most of that labor is invisible.
The strange thing is that I actually like cooking. I always have. There’s something deeply satisfying about chopping vegetables while music plays in the background, or watching a sauce slowly thicken while the kitchen fills with the smell of garlic and butter. Cooking can feel creative, almost meditative sometimes.
But the kind of cooking that happens during the holidays often feels different.
It stops being about creativity or enjoyment and starts feeling like a performance.
Suddenly there are expectations attached to everything. The turkey has to be perfectly roasted. The side dishes have to feel homemade. The table has to look festive. And somehow, the person cooking is also supposed to look relaxed and joyful while juggling six different dishes and a sink full of dirty pans.
If you’re a woman, there’s often an extra layer added to all of this: the quiet assumption that you’ll take care of it.
Not because anyone necessarily says it out loud. Sometimes it’s just tradition. Sometimes it’s habit. Sometimes it’s the unspoken belief that women are simply better at these things.
Whatever the reason, the result is the same.
Around the holidays, the kitchen becomes a place where gender roles quietly tighten their grip again.

I started noticing this more clearly a few years ago during Thanksgiving preparations at my family’s house. My mother and I were in the kitchen, juggling pots and trays and cutting boards, while the living room filled with the familiar sounds of football commentary and laughter.
Every so often someone would wander into the kitchen, lift a lid, say something like “Smells amazing,” and then disappear again.
At one point my mom leaned against the counter, wiped her hands on a dish towel, and said something that stuck with me.
“You know,” she sighed, “this is the part nobody talks about.”
She didn’t say it bitterly. More like someone stating a quiet fact that had existed for a long time.
And she was right.
We talk endlessly about holiday traditions, about family gatherings, about gratitude and togetherness. But we rarely talk about the hours of labor that make those traditions possible.
Someone buys the groceries.
Someone chops the onions.
Someone cleans the counters.
Someone wakes up early to start the turkey.
And very often, that someone is a woman.
This doesn’t mean men never cook or help in the kitchen. Many absolutely do. But if you zoom out and look at the broader picture, the numbers tell a clear story: women still perform the majority of meal preparation and household cooking in many families.
During the holidays, that imbalance often becomes even more noticeable.
I remember once suggesting that maybe we should just buy a pie instead of making one from scratch. You would have thought I’d proposed canceling Thanksgiving entirely.
Someone immediately said, “But homemade pie is the whole point.”
And I remember thinking: Is it, though?
Because the pie wasn’t the point.
The gathering was the point. The conversation around the table was the point. The laughter and stories and the strange comfort of everyone being together again—that was the real reason for the holiday.
Yet somehow the focus kept drifting back to the food and whether it had been made the “right” way.


