My kid is exploring a field completely unrelated to anything either parent has ever been involved in. He has great internship and networking connections that he developed on his own. The one field related connection he has is through a family friend. Ironically 2 months of his summer internship is overseas and he would not have been able to accept if both if us were working. |
Women aren’t breast feeding anymore. At least not the mothers that recently had babies in my wealthy neighborhood. My neighbor said it’s no longer pushed in hospitals like when I gave birth 18 years ago and they wouldn’t give anyone on a bottle abs basically shamed and forced everyone to BF. |
Yes and they are typically Muslim men, foreign men from traditional backgrounds. My husband is Bangladeshi and he truly doesn’t care what I do. He would have been content with me being a housewife when I was pregnant. Even when the kids are in school he doesn’t care. He wants me to stay at home and stop stressing over work but he’s not pushy about it. There are men out there like this for sure. Most of my neighbors are Indian and the majority of the wives aren’t working and they don’t seem worried about it or in a hurry to find a job. |
Lots of women still breastfeed. I am glad if women are experiencing less pressure to do it -- it had gotten way out of hand. But also -- I enjoyed breastfeeding. Not pumping, that is miserable. But I enjoyed the actual act of breastfeeding and found it to be a nice, relaxing, enjoyable bonding time with my baby. Being able to take 18 months off from work for an extended maternity leave meant I was able to enjoy that time with my baby, including BFing. And that's what OP is talking about -- finding a man who is invested in creating that option in case his wife wants it. If she doesn't, that's fine. But many women would love to be able to take an extended maternity leave or take a few years off when the kids are small, and simply cannot because their income is absolutely necessary to the family's economic viability. So a man who makes it his goal to make enough to create those options is attractive. Of course it is! |
Blah blah blah No one cares get over yourself and your big “job” you sound self important |
Weird. My husband is from one of the poorest countries and the majority of women don’t work if they are middle or upper class. I work but I don’t have any hang ups toward women who don’t. Mind your own business. |
This is very typical for Muslim women but yet in the west we are labeled as being backward. Men are supposed to provide and our paycheck is ours. It’s not a recommendation that our paycheck is ours. It’s actually a religious thing. If the man can’t provide then women will need to work and that’s fine. I work PT and don’t make a lot of money but I use most of it for kids activities and my ROTH. |
“There are no solutions. There are only trade offs.” -Thomas Sowell.
I don’t know that it was my “dream” to have a SAHM. It was a preference partially because that is how I was raised. On our second date my now wife told me she would be willing to work but her dream was to be a SAHM. She put me through graduate school and then stopped working the Friday before my first day at my post grad job (two of our kids born during graduate school). It has worked well for us. We’ll celebrate our 20th wedding anniversary later this year. Yes, women in her situation can end up in tough spots. But so can men and women in any home/work arrangement. There is no magic “have it all option.” Every choice comes with a set of benefits and costs. Everyone just has to choose which set of benefits/costs they prefer. I completely understand that some men AND women would look at our situation and say “no way would I put myself in that position.” She has sacrificed a career, and I’ve sacrificed much of a personal life outside of our family and work. Beyond my college friendships virtually all of my friendships/socialization (what little time there is for that) are derivative of work/family life. Before any one asks. -We don’t need her income, so not worried there. -I do a lot more cooking than my wife (I handle breakfast every morning. Because it matters to me and I cook on the weekends because I enjoy it). We outsource the rest. -I really enjoy outdoor work around the house but we outsource much of it. Though my wife has been power spraying the house and decks these past few weeks and she loves gardening. -we outsource most of our home cleaning with the exception of the kids having to clean their own space/laundry. -LOL at the idea of me being in control of the money. She handles the day-to-day finances and I take the lead on the long term planning. I don’t even know the logins to our accounts other than the brokerage account. “There are no solutions. There are only tradeoffs.” |
Yes, and these are the same women filling up many of the other fora on DCUM about how exhausted they are, how depressed they are, etc. Choose it if you want to, but own the consequences of being a working mother and stop slamming people who don't choose that life. |
I would do anything to be a stay at home dad but I make way too much money and I am handcuffed for the time being. My time is coming! |
I didn’t even mention a job let alone a big job. You cared enough to answer although without anything to really contribute. |