What's all this talk about static electricity and dodgey wiring blowing out light globes??
Formulanova made the only logical reply when he said that incandescent globes tend to blow out more when they are cold. Which of course is when they are first switched on.
Static electricity will not in any way cause an incandescent light globe to blow out because its most powerful jolt will be in the order of milliamps and the globe requires something in the order of amps to blow it out.
So, FlySurfer, even if your misses has "bear" feet

(man I gotta see that. Post some pics please,) there is no way that she can cause them to blow out by static discharge.
Also, no matter how bad the wiring is it cannot cause the light to blow because all the arcing and sparking in the world cannot generate more than the 240 volts coming from the switchboard. It might cause your house to burn down but the lights will be fine.
CAUTION ! ACHTUNG!!!
This only applies to incandescent globes because they are are entirely resistive. No induction and no capacitance.
It does not apply to fluoro lights or the new compact fluorescent globes.
Also does not apply to tvs, refrigerators etc which certainly can be blown up by arcing and sparking wiring or switches, because they all represent a reactive load, i.e inductive or capacitive.
So, getting back to your Mrs with her "bear" feet blowing the light globes;
When a light globe filament is cold, it's resistance is very much lower than when it is turned on and white hot. A 100 watt light globe has a running resistance of about 550 ohms. Cold it will be about 10 percent of that, i.e about 50 ohms.
Which means when it is first turned on it will get a wack of about 10 times it's normal operating current until the filament reaches operating temperature.
If the filament is made to sloppy tolerances and the cross sectional area varies even a tiny bit, it will cause hot spots to develop in the filament and a disproportionate amount of the input voltage will be dissipated in that spot, causing it to blow out.
If the input voltage is slightly higher than the rated voltage of the light , this effect is greatly amplified.
Therefore, the only thing that determines the likelihood of who gets to deliver the fatal switching is how many times you have the honor of turning on the light, and what is the mains voltage a the time you turn it on.
The mains voltage is quite variable through the day and a 240 volt supply can typically go from 225 volts in peak load up to 260 volts off peak, so if your bear foot Mrs mostly turns on the lights in off peak times, say late at night, then she will pop more globes than you.
So the answer is, stop buying cheap and nasty light globes.
And get your Mrs to the doc to have her bear feet condition looked at.