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General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "Mom’s Who Left Career to SAHP"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It’s really amazing to me that so many smart and well educated women seem to believe that the only way to be intellectually engaged is by working some job. [/quote] What other ways do you suggest?[/quote] Idk, I’m a working mom and my job at a F500 stopped being intellectually stimulating around the time I returned from my first maternity leave six years ago. I am burnt out from trying to be both a mother and employee to my standards. Frankly, I’m not sure why people feel it’s their place to pressure women to be “intellectually stimulated” through full time work while also carrying most of the weight of childcare. I’m not sure who needs to hear this, but it’s okay to want to be a present, full time parent and make room for that in your life. It’s okay if being “intellectually stimulated” takes a back seat to raising your kids in that season of life. And yes, there are ways to be intellectually stimulated without working in some corporate job. Most jobs are not exactly intellectual or stimulating. I work in a stuffy corporate financial services environment and my job bores me to death. [b]I’d rather be reading, at a book club, writing, reading a NYT article, teaching my kids their alphabet, or spending time with the amazing people they are and are becoming. All of those things are both more stimulating and meaningful to me than redundant meetings and town halls done by one of thousands of cogs in the wheel. [/b]I am replaceable at work, but I’m not replaceable to my kids. If I could afford to, I’d quit and go back to work when I was ready[/quote] I’m baffled by really anyone who would rather work for a corporation/organization than be free to do whatever they’d like. I can possibly understand if you own your own company that is somewhat interesting work. But a corporation or the federal government? No way. I have a desirable career and know at the end of the day I’m a cog in the wheel. I have to attend pointless meetings, enter leave in a system, spend most of my day responding to emails and Teams chats, and subject to ridiculous RTO rules where I commute to sit alone in a conference room in Teams. I am working because they pay me money. Reading a book of my choice is more intellectually stimulating than this. [/quote] Yes thank you. 100% if we could afford it, neither my husband nor I would work for money. This cannot be uncommon.[/quote] I just went on a girls trip with friends. I am the only SAHM. Everyone else works. Some are divorced. DH earns more than possibly everyone combined on the trip, including their spouses. My friends all said they wished they had my life and I am living the dream. The most competent one in the group is high earning but like high six figure earning so very high for a woman, but not so high for a man. She is going through a divorce and likely will have to buy her husband out on the house and pay him alimony and child support. She will also be on hook for kids’ college.[/quote] She would probably have a much worse quality of life if she was a SAHM in her 50s divorcing. My mom was SAHM and gave up her career to support my father’s career, which required frequent moves. They separated when I was in high school, but she felt trapped in the marriage for years before they separated. I realized she was unhappy when I was in 3rd grade, mainly because she was pretty vocal about how miserable she was. If you have millions banked or tons of family money it may worth the risk. For lots of people, however, it is a big stretch financially and risky if things don’t work out. [/quote] DP. Maybe? Divorce sucks. Alimony and child support exist for a reason, although obviously the way that plays out varies wildly. I understand that people get screwed by divorce every day but I still think the lesson is to try not to have children with someone who would treat you poorly if things go wrong; NOT to live your life unhappily working and outsourcing childcare (if that describes your situation) because of what if. There are so many good reasons to work and good reasons to stay home (depending on the person), but this logic always strikes me as the absolute saddest.[/quote]
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