I get your point but your argument is not quite right: don't say it out loud.
What I think you mean is that paid leave should be flexible to accommmodate a variety of life's challenges, including births, deaths, caregiving, and recuperation. Maternity leave is NOT a vacation or recuperation from life's/work's challenges. It's hard, and grueling, and can be awful. Presenting it as "a break" is going to get you flamed and that's fair. But it is also fair to ask for leave for caregiving when you need it. |
Vitamin "D" is the answer. |
Maternity is mostly for the benefit of the child. It does help the mother, but countries with generous maternity leave policies do it because the children have better outcomes when their parents care for them at that young age. |
Hey this is not the suffering Olympics. You don’t need to minimize what someone else is going through just to be an ass. Childbirth, recovery and caring for infants is exhausting, but it is of a limited duration of time. Perimenopause can last years and be awful. For some people it’s a breeze, for others it is horrific. Spending hours each day commuting and sitting at a desk has a cumulative negative impact on health that is very serious if unaddressed. After RTO I am out of the house about 12 hours a day. I need 9 hours of sleep to function well. That leaves me with 3 hours a day to do absolutely everything else including the care of my children. I do my best to eat well but where am I supposed to get in a workout? Throw in peri/menopause. I am white but now I see firsthand why so many WOC die young of strokes and such. RTO is sending us back 50 years. |
(and I agree that you should not say this out loud. It reveals a lot of selfishness and ignorance. If you need a break, look into STD or find a different job.) |
Adopt a child, take FMLA, return to the office after 12 weeks, and see what a cake walk it all is. |
Did “peri” affect your reading comprehension? PP was trying to directly compare “peri” and childbirth, presumably to suggest that women should get “peri” leave because it’s just as hard as having a baby. |
Yes!! My kids are 10 and 7, we spent the week camping and I cannot wait to go back to work this evening and be alone with my music and my lab equipment. Heaven! |
We work too much in the US. We need to have 4 day work weeks. And 6 weeks paid vacations like in Europe. Plus free healthcare. |
NP I have kids and I’m currently in peri so I was not bothered. Obviously anyone who has kids knows it’s not remotely comparable to maternity leave needs so it’s not even something to argue. But I do think peri should (among other things like burn out, depression) be a legitimate reason for leave. |
Believe me when the men hit their 40s and 50s they make it up in kidney stones, gallbladder surgeries, and heart attacks. And for the healthy ones they knee and hip replacements. |
No worries, AI will send us back to slavery. |
This. I'm childfree but well aware that maternity leave isn't a vacation. |
Having a kit is more “acute” meaning you will deal with discomfort for 2-3 years. Peri can last 10 years + Wanting to raising young infant and wanting to manage peri are both healthy, and not a vs competition. |
+1. I have three kids and never found my sleepless maternity leaves where I attempted to bond with my baby, maintain my bonds with and take care of my older children, lose 20 pounds while keeping my milk supply up, and deal with 6 weeks of postpartum bleeding - to say nothing of hormonal ups and downs or the toll pregnancy or nursing take on your body - akin to a vacation. Nor did I find the first year or two back in the office after having a child freeing. I had to work very hard after having all of my kids to continue to advance and be taken seriously. There is a lot of vulnerability around being a working mom and the periods during and after pregnancy are very challenging. Maybe you like the idea of being able to take a break from work or the idea of focusing on yourself or passions outside work? If so, take as much vacation as possible and look into taking a sabbatical. You’ll be setting a good example for your team and you’ll get some perspective and rest, which it sounds like you badly need if you are crying about stress from work in front of your direct reports. |