It just hurt when you try to use your brain. |
I think it's bad for women. It makes it look like it's easy and now men will expect all women should be back at work with no break. Even 6 weeks is not enough and other countries give women like a year off paid. Maybe she didn't want to lose her job so felt pressured to go back to work early? |
Agree. |
Who at one week of life won't know difference. |
Men aren’t paying attention nor do they care about what some woman in Tennessee is doing. Voting for rapists is bad for women. Stay focused. |
You are treating her as if she isn't a capable adult. Believe it or not, some women make decisions that benefit themselves and their families. |
This makes me so thankful that I complete and total control over the timing of my pregnancies. I know that not everyone is so fortunate. |
Which only shows how bad our adoption process is. Why didn't this parent have a plan in place with employer for this scenario? Studies have already shown there is a primal loss from mother at that age, then the infant gets stuck with a caregiver because it's more important for adoptive mom to train someone rather than provide the infant bonding time for a month. |
Like Kate Middleton coming down the hospital stairs in stilettos and full make up hours after giving birth. |
As we all know, coaching basketball is hard work. You spend hours in the field digging for new offensive schemes, followed by long hours in the mines looking for players in the earth. The job is almost entirely mental. She didn't give birth with her brain. |
Imagine expecting women to be able to walk after giving birth. Crazy! |
We wouldn't even talk, let along have a thread, about a man in her situation.
Her husband is a trailing spouse who likely negotiated for a lot of leave because she came back so soon--he also works for the University athletics department, but he has a lower-visibility (and lower-paying job) than she does. At her last two head coaching jobs, he also had lower-ranking jobs in the athletics department at those schools. This is incredibly common in the academic world--where one spouse is the leading, superstar spouse career wise and the other spouse is trailing and gets hired by the same schools as part of the package deal. The trailing spouse usually ends up getting a LOT of parental leave and flexibility as part of the package deal as well, which I suspect is what happened here. |
Yep--her husband is a classic university trailing spouse if you look at their job history. Not uncommon for trailing spouses to be able to bring the kid to work and have extended leave so the other spouse can shine. Also, once the child is older, big universities have high-quality preschools on campus, and their child might go there for preschool. |
Stepping back a bit, this situation gives me pause because we've set up a culture where there is this feeling that this time of life: pregnancy, giving birth, new parents, new baby, is just another thing on the to-do list.
In a case by case basis, sure, I'm happy for this coach who is able to get make the choice to get back to work for a bit during a peak time in her career. Great for those who can, but why, as a culture, don't we value this time? |
This is a time for mom and baby to bond. She is not poor. She can afford to stay home. It's sad she would prefer to go to work. She will never get this time back. |