Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're pleased with this? Better make sure when she grows up she's gorgeous with a hot bod so she can marry rich straight out of college, boo.
Or maybe she can just be a nice, well-rounded person that can hopefully one day meet a man who loves and respects her?
Love and respect is only enough if she’s going to pull her own weight financially. If she’s assuming a man will support her she’s going to need to bring something to the table. The financial statistics aren’t great here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're pleased with this? Better make sure when she grows up she's gorgeous with a hot bod so she can marry rich straight out of college, boo.
Or maybe she can just be a nice, well-rounded person that can hopefully one day meet a man who loves and respects her?
Anonymous wrote:You're pleased with this? Better make sure when she grows up she's gorgeous with a hot bod so she can marry rich straight out of college, boo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 7 my son learned that some adults stay home (literally no one in our social circle does so he thought all adults were assigned a job) and he said "when I grow up do you think i can be a dad who doesn't work?!
Dont read much in to this OP. Kids have no idea where life will take them.
SAHM here. When one of my sons was around 9-10, he also said he wants to marry a rich girl so he can stay home and hang out with the kids. He thought I had a very good life. DS has not said that in years. He is a teenager now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious because DD is 5 and has been saying her dream job is to be a SAHM. We're pleased with this but don't know where she got the idea from. I did not stay home, both of her grandmothers still work full-time (though they stayed home for years when their kids were young), and all of our family friends and neighbors are 2 income households. She's had a nanny since birth who she loves, and DH and I have worked from home since she was several months old. Our conclusion is that she must have many friends at school with SAHMs.
Those of you who are SAHMs, at what age did you know you wanted to be one? Those who dreamed of being a SAHM when you were young, did you end up as one? As a child, I didn't dream of being a SAHM, though I wouldn't mind it now.
Have you met the parents of your 5 year old child’s friends? I have a five year old and know (at least in passing) most of her classmates’ parents and all of her friends’ parents. Same for my two younger children. My kids have wanted to be firefighters, the president, a ballerina, a princess at disney world, and someone who works at Goldman Sachs. The amount of thought you are putting into this is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious because DD is 5 and has been saying her dream job is to be a SAHM. We're pleased with this but don't know where she got the idea from. I did not stay home, both of her grandmothers still work full-time (though they stayed home for years when their kids were young), and all of our family friends and neighbors are 2 income households. She's had a nanny since birth who she loves, and DH and I have worked from home since she was several months old. Our conclusion is that she must have many friends at school with SAHMs.
Those of you who are SAHMs, at what age did you know you wanted to be one? Those who dreamed of being a SAHM when you were young, did you end up as one? As a child, I didn't dream of being a SAHM, though I wouldn't mind it now.