Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell people I like my life and have no intention of going back to work. I don’t care what they think and don’t owe them an explanation.
This. All of my working friends (doctors, lawyers) say they’d love to stay home. They just can’t afford to.
Lots of women with much lower household incomes stay home. What you really mean is that they can’t afford the lifestyle they prefer if they stay home. But lawyers and doctors probably locked themselves in with student loans. I did too, but we lived entirely on my husband’s income for several years while I worked solely to pay off loans (and maintain daycare). It doesn’t take long if they really want to quit work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow people are rude. I work part time. There is SO f’in much to do all day every day I don’t understand these people. I do laundry, dishes, organize, clean up, cook, drive kids places, pick em up, play, homework, more laundry, watch sports they do, coordinate appointments, pick up prescriptions, coordinate activities, coordinate paying help, school crap, friend stuff, laundry, walk the dog, go to the store, go to the hardware store, have things done like gutters, vent cleaning and on and on and on it goes. How TF would there not be enough to do every day?!
Everything you listed is done by working parents too. I think that’s why OP and others run into so much judgement.
Well, you missed the part where I work. So, judgment abounds indeed.
I didn’t miss it. You provided a long list of things that people can do while at home that are done by all parents/adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell people I like my life and have no intention of going back to work. I don’t care what they think and don’t owe them an explanation.
This. All of my working friends (doctors, lawyers) say they’d love to stay home. They just can’t afford to.
Anonymous wrote:"I have been riding the gravy train since my youngest was born."
Anonymous wrote:tell them you're working on your PhD dissertation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow people are rude. I work part time. There is SO f’in much to do all day every day I don’t understand these people. I do laundry, dishes, organize, clean up, cook, drive kids places, pick em up, play, homework, more laundry, watch sports they do, coordinate appointments, pick up prescriptions, coordinate activities, coordinate paying help, school crap, friend stuff, laundry, walk the dog, go to the store, go to the hardware store, have things done like gutters, vent cleaning and on and on and on it goes. How TF would there not be enough to do every day?!
Everything you listed is done
by working parents too. I think that’s why OP and others run into so much judgement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow people are rude. I work part time. There is SO f’in much to do all day every day I don’t understand these people. I do laundry, dishes, organize, clean up, cook, drive kids places, pick em up, play, homework, more laundry, watch sports they do, coordinate appointments, pick up prescriptions, coordinate activities, coordinate paying help, school crap, friend stuff, laundry, walk the dog, go to the store, go to the hardware store, have things done like gutters, vent cleaning and on and on and on it goes. How TF would there not be enough to do every day?!
Everything you listed is done by working parents too. I think that’s why OP and others run into so much judgement.
Anonymous wrote:You can say you're helping a loved one with a chronic illness. If pressed you can say,
I'd rather not get into it now for their privacy, but trust me it takes a lot of time. How about you? How do you spend your days?
Anonymous wrote:... you do not need to be polite to anyone asking such a personal question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say I volunteer.
“Why volunteer for free when you could get paid?”
Anonymous wrote:SAHM of teens here …. Just say you take care of your family and manage the house. Don’t worry about how other people react, you can’t control that so smile and move on.