Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
+1 my mom was a SAHM and she'd never want me to be. She'd be really disappointed frankly. Too many opportunities they worked hard to provide me with and so much education they paid for...
But what about spending the early years enriching a child rather than sending them to a daycare with underpaid young poor women?
We don't send the kids to KinderCare - We had a nanny with a BA in childhood education. I can't speak for the desi culture but in mine, care by professionals or maternal grandparents is considered the best. There are things that are acceptable in the American culture - formula, pacifiers, CIO - that are deal breakers there. Giving your child formula makes you a bad mom, but leaving the baby with the nanny or grandparents to go take care of yourself is encouraged and admired. It's a totally different mindset.
Um, what? You are totally wrong about formula, pacifiers, CIO. My mom and her friends encouraged all of those things, LOL. My kids went to an in-home daycare, then they went to preschool. That's pretty typical among the Indian-American families I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I'm Eastern European and it's taboo for us too. It's a sign of being uneducated or poorly educated (low ranked college or only college). My mom has a PhD in a hard science and believes that SAH is akin to dementia, as the brain drops its plasticity by not being challenged enough. We're also used to hiring a lot of help and there is no shame in outsourcing any menial tasks. I have friends from high school who have never changed a diaper or cooked a meal and our kids are college aged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
+1 my mom was a SAHM and she'd never want me to be. She'd be really disappointed frankly. Too many opportunities they worked hard to provide me with and so much education they paid for...
But what about spending the early years enriching a child rather than sending them to a daycare with underpaid young poor women?
We don't send the kids to KinderCare - We had a nanny with a BA in childhood education. I can't speak for the desi culture but in mine, care by professionals or maternal grandparents is considered the best. There are things that are acceptable in the American culture - formula, pacifiers, CIO - that are deal breakers there. Giving your child formula makes you a bad mom, but leaving the baby with the nanny or grandparents to go take care of yourself is encouraged and admired. It's a totally different mindset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
It’s not shameful at all. Indian/Pakistani immigrants are on average highly educated and the culture highly values ambition. My husband and I are Pakistani-American - he is a partner at a Big4 firm and I am an inhouse general counsel - we’re youngish with young kids (7 and 3). I love being a mom and all things kids, and while I sometimes debate whether I want to be a SAHM, I am proud of my career and I have little desire to step out of the workforce and work my up again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
+1 my mom was a SAHM and she'd never want me to be. She'd be really disappointed frankly. Too many opportunities they worked hard to provide me with and so much education they paid for...
But what about spending the early years enriching a child rather than sending them to a daycare with underpaid young poor women?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
+1 my mom was a SAHM and she'd never want me to be. She'd be really disappointed frankly. Too many opportunities they worked hard to provide me with and so much education they paid for...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
I also don’t think it’s shameful in the least, however Indian woman who are older had very little choice in their lives and often had to make great sacrifices. They want THEIR daughters to shoot for the stars. My MIL is Indian and is still bitter about all she had to give up.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a White sahm and curious why it’s so rare in the Indian community. If your DH makes enough as a ‘physician/banker/attorney’ why not sahm for a few years at least? I don’t get the shame in it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how do most Indian Americans dual high power couples do it? I’m in medicine and know tons of dual physicians Indian Americans in tough subspecialties with multiple kids and always wondered how it works. How would your in laws ideally want you to set up your life?
I dont even have kids but I think it may be possible with the kind of joint living with in-laws or parents???
The Indian American dual physicians that I know don’t do joint living. They do get babysitting help from their parents but mostly they just outsource everything. Nannies/au pairs, house keepers, grocery delivery/ dinner out/ home made food ordered by aunties, etc.
That sounds exhausting. My husband has a pretty chill job and even I’m ready to SAHM despite my medical training. It all feels too much sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how do most Indian Americans dual high power couples do it? I’m in medicine and know tons of dual physicians Indian Americans in tough subspecialties with multiple kids and always wondered how it works. How would your in laws ideally want you to set up your life?
I dont even have kids but I think it may be possible with the kind of joint living with in-laws or parents???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how do most Indian Americans dual high power couples do it? I’m in medicine and know tons of dual physicians Indian Americans in tough subspecialties with multiple kids and always wondered how it works. How would your in laws ideally want you to set up your life?
I dont even have kids but I think it may be possible with the kind of joint living with in-laws or parents???
The Indian American dual physicians that I know don’t do joint living. They do get babysitting help from their parents but mostly they just outsource everything. Nannies/au pairs, house keepers, grocery delivery/ dinner out/ home made food ordered by aunties, etc.