Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not a "stay at home" parent for all of adulthood. Once your kids are in school you're simply unemployed.
That’s a descriptor, not a job title. You’re unemployed before your kids are in school as well if you’re not gainfully employed.
A stay-at-home parent isn’t a job title, either. It’s an excuse for not having a job— an excuse that loses credibility once your kids are in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not a "stay at home" parent for all of adulthood. Once your kids are in school you're simply unemployed.
That’s a descriptor, not a job title. You’re unemployed before your kids are in school as well if you’re not gainfully employed.
A stay-at-home parent isn’t a job title, either. It’s an excuse for not having a job— an excuse that loses credibility once your kids are in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not a "stay at home" parent for all of adulthood. Once your kids are in school you're simply unemployed.
That’s a descriptor, not a job title. You’re unemployed before your kids are in school as well if you’re not gainfully employed.
Anonymous wrote:You're not a "stay at home" parent for all of adulthood. Once your kids are in school you're simply unemployed.
Anonymous wrote:You're not a "stay at home" parent for all of adulthood. Once your kids are in school you're simply unemployed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this another post meant to mock stay at home parents? I. So tired of this theme.
No. My mother was a stay at home mom and never met a more hard working person than her. I'm not familiar with any of her benefits as my late father handled it all and had plenty of resources so it wasn't a real issue.
I want to know for a South Asian friend who moved here at 18, got married during college, had twins, never worked, is 59 now.
Is she married now or married at least 10 years? She can collect on her spouse’s benefit. Is she a US citizen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this another post meant to mock stay at home parents? I. So tired of this theme.
No. My mother was a stay at home mom and never met a more hard working person than her. I'm not familiar with any of her benefits as my late father handled it all and had plenty of resources so it wasn't a real issue.
I want to know for a South Asian friend who moved here at 18, got married during college, had twins, never worked, is 59 now.
Anonymous wrote:Is this another post meant to mock stay at home parents? I. So tired of this theme.