Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, teenagers aren’t very subtle but it is a valid question. Why do you need to be at home all day and not at work? It isn’t the 1950s. Hire a cleaner and order everything like groceries, etc.
Because I can! And I like to play tennis and do pilates after drop-off b/c I am #1 chauffeur from 3-9 pm with sports, activities, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not usually a very strict parent, but if my 13 year old said that to me I would make them submit to a week where I: do not drive them anywhere, including their favorite sports and classes, make them take the school bus, make them make their own meals, stop cleaning the house or doing the dishes, and stop doing laundry. If they have no idea what adulting looks like, we need to show them.
The issue with this (to me) is parents who both work do all these things for their children and their home. Adulting for most people looks like both parents holding down a job and doing all these things.
I think rather than react defensively, view it as an opportunity to have honest conversations about why it's a privilege to have the choice, pros and cons of the choice, why more often women do this than men, what it does to earning power, risks involved, rewards involved, why it was the right choice for you and what it means for your family. Ask them if they could see themselves doing this as parents and why. Listen to what they have to say. Treat them like thinking people and have a conversation with them about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, teenagers aren’t very subtle but it is a valid question. Why do you need to be at home all day and not at work? It isn’t the 1950s. Hire a cleaner and order everything like groceries, etc.
Because I can! And I like to play tennis and do pilates after drop-off b/c I am #1 chauffeur from 3-9 pm with sports, activities, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I am not usually a very strict parent, but if my 13 year old said that to me I would make them submit to a week where I: do not drive them anywhere, including their favorite sports and classes, make them take the school bus, make them make their own meals, stop cleaning the house or doing the dishes, and stop doing laundry. If they have no idea what adulting looks like, we need to show them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s laughable that you claim being a sahm to teens is just as difficult as being a sahm to babies/toddlers. If you’re that exhausted scale back the Pilates and tennis.
If your kid is asking “what do you do all day” then it seems like you’re not doing a great job being a sahm
Teens are much harder. We are going from after school till 10pm some nights with activities. Sports are sometimes at 5 am.
But you have 6 hours to yourself to do whatever you want. And your teens can wipe their own butts and make their own snacks. SAHm to babies and toddlers is a relentless slog all day then they go to sleep and you’re cleaning up from the mess and then sleep and repeat.
YOURE not the one doing the activities; youre just driving. Its not that hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s laughable that you claim being a sahm to teens is just as difficult as being a sahm to babies/toddlers. If you’re that exhausted scale back the Pilates and tennis.
If your kid is asking “what do you do all day” then it seems like you’re not doing a great job being a sahm
Teens are much harder. We are going from after school till 10pm some nights with activities. Sports are sometimes at 5 am.
Teens are much harder. We are going from after school till 10pm some nights with activities. Sports are sometimes at 5 am.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my kid said anything like that, it would be the one and only time. But playing tennis and doing Pilates is just asking for a comment. You’re a kept women.
Is any mom who plays tennis and goes to Pilates a kept woman? What if she goes after working hours, and what if there are a bunch of WOHMs in her Pilates class? What if she played tennis on Saturdays with a former colleague? What if she meets up with doctors or nurses who work a night shift?!
Is it the activity or the timing that defines being a kept woman in your world? OP has her personal “me” time during the school day, but has already “worked” a few hours early in the morning making food, cleaning, and schlepping kids around, and she’ll pick up the rest of her split shift after tennis… [/quote
She is a kept woman because she is an adult who is financially dependent on someone else. She’s like a grown child. No wonder her kids ask her what she does during the day.
Anonymous wrote:If my kid said anything like that, it would be the one and only time. But playing tennis and doing Pilates is just asking for a comment. You’re a kept women.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sure teenagers say insensitive comments to their work outside the home moms too.
Anonymous wrote:It’s laughable that you claim being a sahm to teens is just as difficult as being a sahm to babies/toddlers. If you’re that exhausted scale back the Pilates and tennis.
If your kid is asking “what do you do all day” then it seems like you’re not doing a great job being a sahm