Do working moms actually like the "WOHM" acronym??

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We don't have time to worry about such things.


such a martyr
Anonymous
I'll play:

The acronym WOHM is silly and unnecessary. No one uses this term when speaking ("Hi, I'm Wanda and I'm a work outside of the home mom!"). It's an acronym used exclusively in DCUMLandia and similar internet based places as a PC mechanism for not offending SAHMs who feel that the term working mom (for those with paying jobs) is hurtful since it somehow makes them (SAHMs) feel under valued. I don't understand why this term was developed or why anyone feels it is necessary. If you have job, then you work (working mom, working person, working teenager). If you don't have a job, then you don't work. BUT, that doesn't mean that society thinks SAHMs are home eating bonbons. We get it. You are caring for kids and the home. And as far as we can tell, you don't mind the SAHM moniker, right? Because, you are at home. But why must we have the WOHM term? What the hell does my job have to do with not being at home?? Should I start telling people I'm a lawyer/doctor/ unicorn who works at an office instead of my kitchen table? Seems odd. I can't imagine a working mom coined that damn WOHM term.

So let's get back to the basics. SAHM and WM. We all know what these terms mean. They work just fine.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Let's try this again. SAHM Sally's job is to care for her kids and her house during the core hours of the day while her DH is at work. Her kid(s) might be a baby (who naps) or a preschooler (who also naps) and eventually a kid in full day K (which means seven hours of child free time). Sally has access to her home during the day, and can clean, go grocery shopping, do laundry, run errands, take kids to the doctor or dentist, etc. WOHM Wanda must do these same tasks, but she isn't at home during the core hours of the day...so these chores (ie:second job) must wait until nights or weekends. The exception being the kids' appointments or sick days when Wanda and her DH must negotiate how they will handle the appointments or split the sick days.

Can you understand this? It's simple. All of the household chores that Sally has Wanda has too...but Wanda can't accomplish those chores leisurely during the week because she isn't home...she's in her office. Now I know what you are thinking...that Sally is watching a kid or two. How can Sally possibly do housework with her kids around??? Ask Wanda. Wanda's kids are around nights and weekends when she's working her second shift at home, struggling to clean, do laundry, etc.

Make sense?



Uh, yeah. So? Working mom chooses to work, SAHM chooses to stay home. Why are you being so condescending about it?

I stay at home. I make it work. I used to WOHM, at which time I also made it work. Life gets done. Get over your insecurities and do what you want.


She is condescending b/c the working mom doesn't choose to work; she has to work to afford food and housing and such. Her bad choice was not marrying for money.


Or just luck of the draw because she can't live off her or DH's filthy rich parents and/or inheritance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I always thought WOHM and WAHM were the same thing!

Thanks for clarifying. And I too prefer "working mom." I don't think it's a slap in the fact to moms who work from home or stay at home and don't work (for money--we all know that SAHMs do a lot of work!). It's just a more familiar term to people who don't camp out on message boards all day.


That's the thing, all moms are working moms. The distinction lies in where the work occurs.


Sorry, a working mom has to deal with customer's and adhere to someone else's demands and schedule (whether a boss or their clients).

A SAHM has no constraints on her schedule AT ALL until her kids are in elementary school (and then it's only the bus schedule which then leaves here childfree for hours to do whatever she feels like). And if the schedule of the bus urks her, she can always home school. The only person she might report to is her husband bankrolling her kick-back lifestyle.

The WOHM and WAHM distinction reflects the inflexibility and stress that commuting brings; if you are WAHM and your elementary school age kid gets sick, you can probably continue to work and just set them up with an ipad and some books for the day. Likewise with arranging work on the house, house keepers, etc. They can zip over to DC school for those middle of the day activities just to a do a pop-in, unlike a WOHM who has to budget time for commuting and likely cannot easily return to work after the event.

And need to reiterate the morass and toll that commuting takes in this area, WOHM and WAHM is a very different experience.


Again, this GREATLY depends on the age and personality of your child! How old are your children and how long were you at home with them? I do WOH, but my DD is under 1 year old, and I'm sorry, but my schedule has plenty of constraints on it when I'm home alone with her! Her sleeping and eating schedule/demands are as much as my employer sometimes. I completely AGREE with you that WOH and WAH vastly different, but I also think you paint WAH with a broad brush. Of course, it is more flexible because of the lack of commute, but if I were to WAH for my career, I would still be stuck on a pretty strict schedule.


Haha, I was home for a year with both DC. It is hilarious that you are equating the schedule of a child's eating and sleeping to having to drop a kid off at daycare and run the risk of being fired if you consistently run late. The worst outcome if you consistently run late in feeding your child or miss nap, a cranky baby.



Yes... as I stated, I actually WOH! I'm just saying, you can't say that SAHM can't just do whatever they want whenever. "Getting fired for running late" is an issue, of course, but there are other demands on people's lives than their boss. Relax!
Anonymous
"It's an acronym used exclusively in DCUMLandia and similar internet based places as a PC mechanism for not offending SAHMs who feel that the term working mom (for those with paying jobs) is hurtful since it somehow makes them (SAHMs) feel under valued. I don't understand why this term was developed or why anyone feels it is necessary. If you have job, then you work (working mom, working person, working teenager). If you don't have a job, then you don't work. BUT, that doesn't mean that society thinks SAHMs are home eating bonbons. We get it. You are caring for kids and the home."

+1
Anonymous
Just say working mom. Only someone who is ridiculously insecure and defensive would go on and on about how staying at home is WORK! I WORK TOO!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'll play:

The acronym WOHM is silly and unnecessary. No one uses this term when speaking ("Hi, I'm Wanda and I'm a work outside of the home mom!"). It's an acronym used exclusively in DCUMLandia and similar internet based places as a PC mechanism for not offending SAHMs who feel that the term working mom (for those with paying jobs) is hurtful since it somehow makes them (SAHMs) feel under valued. I don't understand why this term was developed or why anyone feels it is necessary. If you have job, then you work (working mom, working person, working teenager). If you don't have a job, then you don't work. BUT, that doesn't mean that society thinks SAHMs are home eating bonbons. We get it. You are caring for kids and the home. And as far as we can tell, you don't mind the SAHM moniker, right? Because, you are at home. But why must we have the WOHM term? What the hell does my job have to do with not being at home?? Should I start telling people I'm a lawyer/doctor/ unicorn who works at an office instead of my kitchen table? Seems odd. I can't imagine a working mom coined that damn WOHM term.

So let's get back to the basics. SAHM and WM. We all know what these terms mean. They work just fine.


If you don't have a job, then you don't GET PAID FOR work.

Because the fact is that there is plenty of work that people do and don't get paid for. Much of this work is traditionally done by women.
Anonymous
I think I've finally come up with the silver bullet to end the debate! Here's the perfect term of art:

Pro Bono Caregiver

This is perfect! Works for a man or woman! Doesn't carry the 1950s Little Suzy Homemaker baggage so many women try to avoid! If your purpose of staying home is to be with your child and provide care...and that's your work...but you don't get paid...then this term should be perfect!

And just to be clear: I'm not being snarky. I really do think this term conveys what SAHMs seem to want to convey.

Thoughts?

I'm trademarking this
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I think I've finally come up with the silver bullet to end the debate! Here's the perfect term of art:

Pro Bono Caregiver

This is perfect! Works for a man or woman! Doesn't carry the 1950s Little Suzy Homemaker baggage so many women try to avoid! If your purpose of staying home is to be with your child and provide care...and that's your work...but you don't get paid...then this term should be perfect!

And just to be clear: I'm not being snarky. I really do think this term conveys what SAHMs seem to want to convey.

Thoughts?

I'm trademarking this


I'm down with PBC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'll play:

The acronym WOHM is silly and unnecessary. No one uses this term when speaking ("Hi, I'm Wanda and I'm a work outside of the home mom!"). It's an acronym used exclusively in DCUMLandia and similar internet based places as a PC mechanism for not offending SAHMs who feel that the term working mom (for those with paying jobs) is hurtful since it somehow makes them (SAHMs) feel under valued. I don't understand why this term was developed or why anyone feels it is necessary. If you have job, then you work (working mom, working person, working teenager). If you don't have a job, then you don't work. BUT, that doesn't mean that society thinks SAHMs are home eating bonbons. We get it. You are caring for kids and the home. And as far as we can tell, you don't mind the SAHM moniker, right? Because, you are at home. But why must we have the WOHM term? What the hell does my job have to do with not being at home?? Should I start telling people I'm a lawyer/doctor/ unicorn who works at an office instead of my kitchen table? Seems odd. I can't imagine a working mom coined that damn WOHM term.

So let's get back to the basics. SAHM and WM. We all know what these terms mean. They work just fine.


If you don't have a job, then you don't GET PAID FOR work.

Because the fact is that there is plenty of work that people do and don't get paid for. Much of this work is traditionally done by women.


You're so defensive. It's really absurd. See the post above yours.
Anonymous
Works for me, too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'll play:

The acronym WOHM is silly and unnecessary. No one uses this term when speaking ("Hi, I'm Wanda and I'm a work outside of the home mom!"). It's an acronym used exclusively in DCUMLandia and similar internet based places as a PC mechanism for not offending SAHMs who feel that the term working mom (for those with paying jobs) is hurtful since it somehow makes them (SAHMs) feel under valued. I don't understand why this term was developed or why anyone feels it is necessary. If you have job, then you work (working mom, working person, working teenager). If you don't have a job, then you don't work. BUT, that doesn't mean that society thinks SAHMs are home eating bonbons. We get it. You are caring for kids and the home. And as far as we can tell, you don't mind the SAHM moniker, right? Because, you are at home. But why must we have the WOHM term? What the hell does my job have to do with not being at home?? Should I start telling people I'm a lawyer/doctor/ unicorn who works at an office instead of my kitchen table? Seems odd. I can't imagine a working mom coined that damn WOHM term.

So let's get back to the basics. SAHM and WM. We all know what these terms mean. They work just fine.


If you don't have a job, then you don't GET PAID FOR work.

Because the fact is that there is plenty of work that people do and don't get paid for. Much of this work is traditionally done by women.


You're so defensive. It's really absurd. See the post above yours.


What am I defensive about? I do work that I get paid for. I also do work that I don't get paid for.
Anonymous
I posted earlier. It never occurred to me to gripe to others about how hard my life was as a single, working in an office mom. With a child with some issues that required a lot of time and energy. It just never crossed my mind.

That was my life at that point. I did what had to be done. Was my laundry always caught up? Hell no. It wasn't unusual to go through a basket of folded clothes to find what I needed. (Hopefully they were folded otherwise I had to iron) My house was clean though because dust was a huge issue for ds. If that meant I washed floors at 10PM, then that's what it meant. He couldn't eat a lot of processed food so I did baking for his treats. Whenever I could fit it in.

As a SAHM I get frickin' bored some days. I've lost the organizational skills I had when ds was little. Housework and laundry are not at the top of my list because if I don't do it today, it's still there tomorrow and no doubt there's plenty of time to do it. I can actually read a whole book now, though.

I still volunteered with his Kindergarten class, etc. I don't think I read a complete book for a few years but oh well.
Anonymous

Thanks PP for admitting you are board at home. I would be.

Also thanks for admitting when you worked you baked in the evening. I love real cooked food but can't fit it in right now. Was thinking about cooking after the kids went to bed. Seems crazy but seems logical all at the same time.
Anonymous
You people overthink EVERY thing. It's so exhausting.
post reply Forum Index » Infants, Toddlers, & Preschoolers
Message Quick Reply
Go to: