Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "SAHMs of children entering school age"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]As long as we can afford it, I’m never going back. It’s just easy. Yes, it’s afforded DH many more work opportunities and advancements, and more money. I’m OK with that. You have to be OK with that. I had a dream job I worked my ass off achieving, and some days I miss it, but never more than I love the this lifestyle. Echoing others, logistically it just makes sense. We don’t ever worry about anything like sick days or snow days, summer vacations or... remote learning. Also, yes, you’ll be so surprised how the time gets away from you. Suddenly it’s 3:30 and you have to leave to get the kids from school in 15 minutes. I definitely keep busy and I’m never bored, but I also enjoy my own company. Introvert here! [/quote] Ugh, women like this are setting society back by decades.[/quote] No, women like this are not setting society back. Women should get the choice. I grew up in a family where my parents were really pissed when I quit. My mom was retired but hated being a mom and wouldn't help with child care (after saying she would) and my child care feel through right before I went back to work and she wouldn't help for a few weeks so I could go back. She resented me and still does for not going back but because I was home it allowed my husband to take better jobs every few years and work his way up. I could handle all the things at home and help his family when his mom needed help and us not worry. Women should have the choice if they can financially afford it. My mom hated being a mom and doing the day to day caretaking. I love it and see how it benefits my kids and husband but more importantly me. I was miserable working. I can easily keep myself busy and am far busier now than working as my focus is different. I want to raise my kids and not be raised by nannies and day care like I was.[/quote] The problem with your entire diatribe is that you confine this to women. All you talk about is you and your mom. What about your dad? What about your DH. Ask yourself why men are not asked to consider what’s best for their children when they make choices about their careers? Sounds like you have issues wIth your mom specific to you and not to an argument about women’s advancement. And how many men are miserable working? Quite a few I’d guess. Why do they have automatically have keep slogging?[/quote] Both of my parents were the same way and both selfish but my Dad more than my Mom. My husband would love to stop working but he has higher income earning potential. My husband has always made us the priority. If I had wanted to work and we needed him to stay home, he would have gladly done it and is very good at it. My husband does a lot and I have no complaints. If your husband doesn't support you, then you have a spouse issue, not a societal issue just like I had a parent issue. Women's advancement as well as Man's should be about many factors and choices. [/quote] Nothing wrong with my spouse. These are societal issues. [/quote] Can we both agree that “society” has a lot of issues and isn’t necessarily that great? I don’t see the point of spending my life trying to conform with society in general. It makes more sense to me to do what is right for my friends and family and people I meet than it is to fully conform and embrace the values of a society that I think we can all agree has issues. [/quote] If your husband cannot be an equal partner and help with your kids, something is very wrong with your husband. If you both cannot make it work, something is wrong with both of you. I don't worry at all if something happens to me as my husband can handle it all.[/quote] This is ridiculous. My husband can’t help with childcare at all during the week. He is gone by 6am and comes home by 10pm. We have been happily married a long time and this arrangement suits us just fine. He makes excellent money, we have great health benefits/pension, and he absolutely loves his job. He handles the bills, I handle the kids and house. I have a degree but never found any job I like as much as hanging out with my kids. I’m an introvert who likes to cook, clean, do yard work, and do maintenance around the house. Instead of making blanket statements about all partnerships, we should focus on supporting the decisions of all types of parents, those who choose to stay at home and those who choose to work. It’s not a one size fits all situation. [/quote] He can help, he chooses not to. Something is wrong if your spouse is gone that long every day all day. You care more about money than family.[/quote] Sounds like you need therapy PP, it’s not healthy to care so much about the lives of others. Please get some support, for your sake and the sake of your friends and family.[/quote] Sounds like you need family counseling. It's not healthy to spend so little time with your children. Please get some help, for your sake and the sake of your children.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics