Anonymous wrote:I'm a feminist, and think that part of being one is accepting that women do what they want without being held back by men.
I grew up with a depressed SAHM. In elementary school my hair was always in a messy ponytail because that's all I could do, I made my own breakfast and lunch, I walked myself to school after locking the front door, and I came home to a note with a list of chores. I wish my mother had worked! If I'd come home to homemade cookies just ONCE I could have ridden that high for years.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a feminist, and think that part of being one is accepting that women do what they want without being held back by men.
I grew up with a depressed SAHM. In elementary school my hair was always in a messy ponytail because that's all I could do, I made my own breakfast and lunch, I walked myself to school after locking the front door, and I came home to a note with a list of chores. I wish my mother had worked! If I'd come home to homemade cookies just ONCE I could have ridden that high for years.
Anonymous wrote:They are allowed to think whatever they want. Saying, some things, will be rude and if it's -your- family, you call them out on being rude. Family don't get a pass on being rude. I don't think what they said is-quite rude enough to offend, exactly. Surely a SAH parent expects and can handle some degree of push back and curiosity
Of course others "deal with this." That question is most clueless of all.
Anonymous wrote:We haven't dealt with that because all the women in our family are progressive feminists, and all of them, even the most outspoken, have spent some time in careers and some time at home with their kids for a variety of reasons; some a full 21 years. At least one family had a dad step out of the workforce for a while.
Planning your financial life to enable you to have the choice to stay at home with kids if you want to and believe it is best for you and your family, and advocating for social structures that support parents' choices of how to care for their children - earning and income or not -- are not inconsistent with feminism.
Some people do not have flexible minds or empathy, so for them it may take personal experience (say the birth of a special needs child) to fully grasp that part of feminism is not criticizing other womens' choices and advocating for families writ large.
Anonymous wrote:We haven't dealt with that because all the women in our family are progressive feminists, and all of them, even the most outspoken, have spent some time in careers and some time at home with their kids for a variety of reasons; some a full 21 years. At least one family had a dad step out of the workforce for a while.
Planning your financial life to enable you to have the choice to stay at home with kids if you want to and believe it is best for you and your family, and advocating for social structures that support parents' choices of how to care for their children - earning and income or not -- are not inconsistent with feminism.
Some people do not have flexible minds or empathy, so for them it may take personal experience (say the birth of a special needs child) to fully grasp that part of feminism is not criticizing other womens' choices and advocating for families writ large.
Anonymous wrote:My brother's wife refused to work and then he stated that he should get a larger inheritance because his family had less wealth than ours did. I suppose that would be my concern with that scenario. If this indeed works for your family, then you need to be content with whatever the consequences of your decision are. No backing out if for example you develop a medical condition and can no longer work. the consequences of your family's decision belong to you and not to your extended family should you require a bailout.
Anonymous wrote:I judged my brothers for this because they completely abdicated even the pretense of being active parents. And then would act all like they were hot sh*t career wise and talk down to the female siblings who didn’t have the luxury of a wife to do all the child rearing. I never said anything to my SILs - but one clearly enjoyed it, the other seemed to hate it.
Anonymous wrote:do you make better money than your relatives? they're probably jealous
Anonymous wrote:I judged my brothers for this because they completely abdicated even the pretense of being active parents. And then would act all like they were hot sh*t career wise and talk down to the female siblings who didn’t have the luxury of a wife to do all the child rearing. I never said anything to my SILs - but one clearly enjoyed it, the other seemed to hate it.