Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marathon running and new construction homes.
-another “high credential” millennial mom (1989)
Just wait until their kids are in high school and college and you are hearing all about them running marathons WITH their kids or attending their D1 athletics or whatever.
If this is triggering for you (it is for me) you need to mute or develop a strong level of detachment from social media generally early on.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in that group and pretty open about the positive and negative I've experienced- domestic assault, becoming a single Mom, parent to a medically disabled child, losing many many pregnancies. I've also talked about wins - successful career.
Some friends have been open about their struggles. One lost two babies and her uterus. Super high achieving person. Another is a famous tech owner that essentially is a recluse ans paranoid.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid age millennial born in 1990. I went to an Ivy with very high achieving woman and these are the trends I’m noticing as we start to become parents
1. Very few stay at home moms despite high earner spouses. I’m surprised by this because many of my friends assumed they’d stay home but I’m noticing most work full time in top but flexible jobs. This makes this combined incomes super high (dual doctors, big law/surgeon, finance/ engineers). I’m sure this will put SAHM mom / single earner families at a disadvantage going forward
2. More kids. Not sure if this is a status symbol or not but lots of 3 kids back to back (again while working big jobs)
3. Traveling alot despite 1 &2
4. Need to post about how amazing their family life is (with obligatory sentence about how sometimes it’s hard)
Anything I’m missing?
Anonymous wrote:My sister is an older millenial (1987) and she and most of her friends are SAHMs. The UMC kind.
Anonymous wrote:I see rare few SAHM/part time moms but a rise in divorced moms among my women physician groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marathon running and new construction homes.
-another “high credential” millennial mom (1989)
Just wait until their kids are in high school and college and you are hearing all about them running marathons WITH their kids or attending their D1 athletics or whatever.
If this is triggering for you (it is for me) you need to mute or develop a strong level of detachment from social media generally early on.
It’s not really triggering for me unless they’re smug about it (which I guess most people bragging on social media are.) the peers who trigger me are the ones who not only had everything handed to them growing up (which I did too) but whose parents now still find a lavish lifestyle as adults- gifted multi million dollar homes, have 3+ kids in private school their parents are paying for, annual international trips funded by parents etc. and have the audacity to brag about it all on social media. It would be annoying to brag if it was self earned, but it’s particularly obnoxious when they are living hand to mouth.
That said, most of my close friends grew up well off, and are hard working adults just trying to balance young kids, career and some time for ourselves, and do not have parents funding the day to day.