Anonymous wrote:East coast are power women; west coast (sadly) are SAHM, especially bay area:
1. Silicon Valley is frighteningly sexist
2. Costs are more extreme -- commute, daycare, etc so it's cheaper to have a SAHP.
3. Work hours are crazy (more like NY) so unless you have family, it becomes impossible to have two WOHP.
3. Incomes are crazy (more like NY) so many families can afford SAHP.
That said, I cannot think of a single one of MY friends who don't work at all -- but it is etsy, teaching, tutoring, volunteering -- it's not a power job (except my single friends).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this depends more on the demographics of the specific community than on the coast. For instance, we live in the inner SF East Bay (Oakland/Berkeley). Most families with school-aged kids in our city are dual income, and most have both parents working 80-100% time. Play dates and gatherings are usually on the weekends. The few people I know who do SAH have a set of friends they connect with during the week, but it's a small subset of their respective neighborhoods. In contrast, we have friends in Piedmont and Fremont who have significant weekday social lives around their kids. The friend in Piedmont had a weekday mid-afternoon birthday party (which I certainly remember from when I was a kid, but have never, ever encountered in my kids' circles--always weekends!) Fremont still has half-day kinder and the friends there meet up with their kids' classmates for lunch and playdates most afternoons. I have no idea what the kids whose parents work full-time do, but I'm sure there are some and presumably they go to aftercare and aren't invited to these playdates, and certainly their parents don't have the opportunity to meet and connect with other families during this time. I think it makes a difference if that's the minority of kids vs. the majority of kids (and I'm sure it's strongly correlated with wealth and ability to SAH during those years, at least given current Bay Area housing costs--families we know with a SAHP all either bought during the recession or have the other parent in tech or another highly lucrative field.
Put another way, I think it's much easier to forge these connections if you are one of many families where both parents work full-time out of the house, and that varies by neighborhood. (My friends in DC proper are all families with two full-time working parents, though I don't know if that's the norm there or not.)
We had a friend who had a mid-week afternoon birthday party. I had never heard such a thing, and am sad to hear it would still be a thing on the west coast
That definitely deflated my hope of the more inclusive ‘hippie’ moms of California.
So I don't think it's much of a thing here either outside of some heavily SAH pockets. (We also found that certain areas have a lot of three-half-day-a-week or co-op preschools, while other areas have mostly full-time preschools--very reflective of where similar households may be.)Anonymous wrote:We are from the west coast but never had kids in school there. In our close in suburb, we feel excluded as we are both working parents and the seems to be mom cliques in our kids school with the SAH and WAH moms, and our kids are feeling left out.
Is this a DC thing or will we see similar dyanamic in Bay area? How common are SAH parents? I feel like this is a big part simply b/c I am not able to socialize with other moms during the worn day and build those relationships. I don't think they are trying to be mean, but definitely not trying to be inclusive (I see them at pickup and class events and say high and make small talk, but the group is always making family playdates, camp coordination etc, and we are not part of that despite at least our kids and their teacher saying all our kids are friends at school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this depends more on the demographics of the specific community than on the coast. For instance, we live in the inner SF East Bay (Oakland/Berkeley). Most families with school-aged kids in our city are dual income, and most have both parents working 80-100% time. Play dates and gatherings are usually on the weekends. The few people I know who do SAH have a set of friends they connect with during the week, but it's a small subset of their respective neighborhoods. In contrast, we have friends in Piedmont and Fremont who have significant weekday social lives around their kids. The friend in Piedmont had a weekday mid-afternoon birthday party (which I certainly remember from when I was a kid, but have never, ever encountered in my kids' circles--always weekends!) Fremont still has half-day kinder and the friends there meet up with their kids' classmates for lunch and playdates most afternoons. I have no idea what the kids whose parents work full-time do, but I'm sure there are some and presumably they go to aftercare and aren't invited to these playdates, and certainly their parents don't have the opportunity to meet and connect with other families during this time. I think it makes a difference if that's the minority of kids vs. the majority of kids (and I'm sure it's strongly correlated with wealth and ability to SAH during those years, at least given current Bay Area housing costs--families we know with a SAHP all either bought during the recession or have the other parent in tech or another highly lucrative field.
Put another way, I think it's much easier to forge these connections if you are one of many families where both parents work full-time out of the house, and that varies by neighborhood. (My friends in DC proper are all families with two full-time working parents, though I don't know if that's the norm there or not.)
We had a friend who had a mid-week afternoon birthday party. I had never heard such a thing, and am sad to hear it would still be a thing on the west coast
That definitely deflated my hope of the more inclusive ‘hippie’ moms of California.
Anonymous wrote:I think this depends more on the demographics of the specific community than on the coast. For instance, we live in the inner SF East Bay (Oakland/Berkeley). Most families with school-aged kids in our city are dual income, and most have both parents working 80-100% time. Play dates and gatherings are usually on the weekends. The few people I know who do SAH have a set of friends they connect with during the week, but it's a small subset of their respective neighborhoods. In contrast, we have friends in Piedmont and Fremont who have significant weekday social lives around their kids. The friend in Piedmont had a weekday mid-afternoon birthday party (which I certainly remember from when I was a kid, but have never, ever encountered in my kids' circles--always weekends!) Fremont still has half-day kinder and the friends there meet up with their kids' classmates for lunch and playdates most afternoons. I have no idea what the kids whose parents work full-time do, but I'm sure there are some and presumably they go to aftercare and aren't invited to these playdates, and certainly their parents don't have the opportunity to meet and connect with other families during this time. I think it makes a difference if that's the minority of kids vs. the majority of kids (and I'm sure it's strongly correlated with wealth and ability to SAH during those years, at least given current Bay Area housing costs--families we know with a SAHP all either bought during the recession or have the other parent in tech or another highly lucrative field.
Put another way, I think it's much easier to forge these connections if you are one of many families where both parents work full-time out of the house, and that varies by neighborhood. (My friends in DC proper are all families with two full-time working parents, though I don't know if that's the norm there or not.)
Anonymous wrote:We just moved back to the Bay Area. I became a SAHM in the process. Between being much older than most other parents + being a SAHM (especially one who retired from a big DC career) + not being a believer in the whole "organic/GMO-free/makemyowndiapersfromcottonIgrewintheyard" philosophy = me feeling like a unicorn pretty much all day, every day.
I think the key, OP, is for you to help your kids get involved in activities that they like where they can meet other kids with shared interests. Help them learn to invest in relationships based on commonalities that go deeper than geography and school assignment. Then they won't care what the school clique kids do.