This one - which I think actually totally misses the point?
First off, she didn’t leave him because he didn’t pander to her neurotically high standards of cleanliness and tidiness, otherwise it would have no wider social resonance. She very likely left him because he left her to juggle a two-person share of the household tasks in one person’s 24 hours. So while ostensibly he's posing as someone who can't understand why someone would be uptight about the occasional glass on the side, he's actually applying that reasoning to a situation where he regularly leaves his wife to tackle his dishes - because he somehow can't understand why anyone would want them cleaned. But of course he knows well it’s not some quirky individual femaleishness to be invested in having basic standards of tidiness upheld - everyone who shares in the benefits & is capable of doing so should muck in without anyone needing to be psychic or framing it as doing a kindness to the woman by relieving her of her natural duties. Do men really think that women have historically spent hours hoovering, washing up and doing laundry specifically because they, as individuals, have a particular liking for clean carpets, plates and sheets that men don’t share? 'Be generous-hearted and cater to her irrational womanly desires or face divorce.' No wonder household work is not valued when many men refuse to acknowledge that they also benefit from it. Alleviating wifework has nothing to do with being kind, it’s about recognising a fair division of labour in the household. And getting husbands to do their fair share by appealing to their kindness, rather than to their basic duty as one member of a team, builds a very shaky reasoning for why they should pitch in (i.e. 'I'm tired tonight, I won't bother washing this, I don't have to be kind all the time').
He’s riding on the wifework trend and that’s why the article’s been successful, but all he really admits to is not bending over backwards to please her whims as a response to differing personal preferences re: household management. What he’s actually saying doesn’t really come under the context of the wifework phenomenon at all, but he frames it in the related language, and comes out looking like this self-deprecating, endearingly naïve victim of modern feminism. I'd be hopping mad as his ex-wife!
AIBU to think he's been quite disingenuous and wonder why people cite it so much? (Happy to be disproved)