Anonymous wrote:I think for a lot of people, there is (a lot) more to life than money. It seems hard for some to grasp, but the people in your life have value beyond what money they do (or do not) make.
Anonymous wrote:That’s easy! What’s more important for your kids… quality time or money? Having a stay-at-home parent gives your kids a stable, healthy, home environment. I can’t quote any studies or statistics because I’m being too lazy to hunt for them, but I’m pretty sure if you did look it up they would show that households that commit to having a stay-at-home parent tend to raise kids that are a bit more self-confident and more emotionally stable than parents that both work and have the kids with a baby sitter or day care.
Anonymous wrote:This week I've found myself feeling guilty that I can go to the pool and read, see friends, etc while DH is stuck at work.
Anonymous wrote:That’s easy! What’s more important for your kids… quality time or money? Having a stay-at-home parent gives your kids a stable, healthy, home environment. I can’t quote any studies or statistics because I’m being too lazy to hunt for them, but I’m pretty sure if you did look it up they would show that households that commit to having a stay-at-home parent tend to raise kids that are a bit more self-confident and more emotionally stable than parents that both work and have the kids with a baby sitter or day care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are one judgemental, self righteous busybody...
+1
Why though? Seriously. This is OP, and no need to be defensive. I have no idea why I feel this way and others don't, and am curious. Not exactly something I can ask in real life.
Ok my honest answer is that my DH has a “big” job. He makes a lot of money, is very senior in his company and works decent hours generally, but if they say get on a plane tomorrow or finish this project, he does. He loves what he does and is very ambitious. He’d do this whether we were married or not, had kids or not. Some version of this is his dream job. So it’s the constant in our lives that I have to work around and accommodate. It’s easiest for me, a mom of 3, to accommodate it by not working.
Now if I had loved my job? I’d maybe have had more qualms about quitting. But I didn’t. So given the circumstances I have to work around...here we are.
He makes enough money that it really doesn’t matter if I spend the day hanging out by the pool or whatever.
Make sense?
This is OP and yes, absolutely, and thanks for your honesty! Does it not bother you because you know he'd work that way regardless, or because you don't need the money, or what? I'm actually trying to work out a way to NOT feel bad, especially because my personal net worth is pretty significant and his isn't, though I know I'm getting jumped all over here.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are making a false equivalency. You are home for one week but have all the supports in place for a WOH life - full day child care, an even split of household responsibilities with your spouse, a system for taking care of your house/life outside of daytime hours (whether that is house cleaners, lawn care people, etc.) I work part-time, but I don’t really have a lot of leisure time to go to the pool, read, have lunch with friends. I fill my time doing all the things my husband hates to do but I don’t really mind - cooking, cleaning, paying bills, mowing the lawn, managing the kid’s activities, driving them around, picking up the dry cleaning, grocery shopping, doing laundry, etc. My DH does not mind that all these things are off his plate and I don’t mind that they are on mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are one judgemental, self righteous busybody...
+1
Why though? Seriously. This is OP, and no need to be defensive. I have no idea why I feel this way and others don't, and am curious. Not exactly something I can ask in real life.
Ok my honest answer is that my DH has a “big” job. He makes a lot of money, is very senior in his company and works decent hours generally, but if they say get on a plane tomorrow or finish this project, he does. He loves what he does and is very ambitious. He’d do this whether we were married or not, had kids or not. Some version of this is his dream job. So it’s the constant in our lives that I have to work around and accommodate. It’s easiest for me, a mom of 3, to accommodate it by not working.
Now if I had loved my job? I’d maybe have had more qualms about quitting. But I didn’t. So given the circumstances I have to work around...here we are.
He makes enough money that it really doesn’t matter if I spend the day hanging out by the pool or whatever.
Make sense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are one judgemental, self righteous busybody...
+1
Why though? Seriously. This is OP, and no need to be defensive. I have no idea why I feel this way and others don't, and am curious. Not exactly something I can ask in real life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has to "justify" anything to you. Most of us who have to work wouldn't choose to do so, at least not in the capacity that we currently do, if we could afford not to.
I can easily see how having a SAHP would be a huge blessing / benefit for the entire family and household. Get out of here with your drama
I was honestly asking, as some of my closest friends don't work, and I love and respect them. My mother didn't work, either. It's not drama to me. But I may have been expecting too much for a rational discussion here.
Guess I have to ask it this way - any other working moms feel this way? SAHMs too defensive.