Gun, try looking in the Cave of Winds for your spiritual answer
See i think that the DOE numbers might be a bit screwy too, oh wait its the gubernet
DOE says average kwh consumption is 10,656 per year.   I used their kwh usage per item and household to check my house.
Central Air     2796
water heating     2552
Lighting                     940
Clothes Dryer     1079
Furnace fan     500
Dishwasher     512
electric range top      536
electric oven      440
microwave oven       209
electric toaster oven    50
coffee maker       116
Color TV x4        548
VCR/DVD x2        140
Satellite dish 1 x4 receivers   520
PC desk top x5        1310
Printer w/ fax copier        216
Ceiling fan x3        150
Clothes Washer        120
Compact Stereo         81
Component Stereo         55
Portable Stereo         19
Answering Machine         35
Cordless telephone x2   52
Rechargeable tools         43
Routers x2         70
based on the DOE my average kwh usage should be 13089, but in reality is its closer to 18,000 per year.
so how did they arrive at an average of 10,656?  I would agree that my house is likely not an average representation so let me try building an average usage from their list
Central Air     2796
water heating     2552
Lighting                     940
Clothes Dryer     1079
Furnace fan     500
thats  7867 kwh so far
everyone maynot have a dishwasher so I'll leave that out
electric range top   536
electric oven   440
microwave oven   209
color TV                137
clothes washer    120
VCR/DVD             70
compact stereo    81
at least 1 PC       262
thats another 1855, so 9722 so far
average household might have
coffee maker      116
electric toaster oven  50
answering machine  35
cordless phone  26
another 227 kwh per year brings that total to 9949, still not hitting the 10,656 average
lets see
Cable box  120
Freezer?  i dont have one but maybe the average home does  1,039
portable stereo 19
that adds another 1178 which brings us up to 11127
all that means is my numbers do not make anymore sense than the DOE's numbers,  just made up and thrown around to make a meanless statistic.
footnotes say they used a 1997 report,  Energy Data Sourcebook for the U.S. Residential Sector, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1997.