Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work full time.....Is that a dig too?
Work is not a relationship. Motherhood is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Earning the money that puts food on my kid's table, and a roof over my head is just as much part of being a parent as building legos with my kid.
It’s not though. And I’m saying this as a WOHM. I did SAH when my kid was 0-3, and there is a lot more parenting going on. A lot. As WOHMs we outsource an important part of parenting. It serves a purpose as kids get older bc they need socialization and structure but no one is ever going to convince me that going to an office and earning money is just as much a part of parenting. By those standards, why don’t you just send a check to your DH weekly? I choose to work but I’m self aware enough to know that someone else is doing the lion’s share of parenting from 9-6 daily.
I'm not following your logic of sending a check to DH.
I've been both a SAH mom and a WOH mom. It wasn't a choice. I did what was right for my family at various stages. My daycare provider didn't parent, any more than I'm parenting the kids in my classroom as a teacher Yes, I'm outsourcing important jobs, but a SAH parent who relies on someone else to provide all the income that puts food on the table is also outsourcing an important job.
Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with SAHM? And then housewife when your kids are in school?
The problem with full time mom is that you’re always 100% a mom. It’s just a title. It’s like grandparents are still grandparents even if they don’t live in the same city.
Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with SAHM? And then housewife when your kids are in school?
The problem with full time mom is that you’re always 100% a mom. It’s just a title. It’s like grandparents are still grandparents even if they don’t live in the same city.
Anonymous wrote:It tells you how they spend their day. Nothing more.
Anonymous wrote:I work full time.....Is that a dig too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s just the truth. If you work, childcare is not your full time job. You are not a childcare provider during work hours, you have hired childcare providers.
Qould it make you feel better if she said “I’m a full-time childcare provider”? She just subbed in “mom”
Yes, every mom is a mom all the time, but not all moms are their child’s full-time childcare provider.
Would you prefer for stay at home parents to refer to themselves as moms who work as child care providers? Would that hurt your feelings less?
If your kids are in school, then you are not a full time mom anymore, according to this very emphatic answer, so I will look forward to hearing less of that, then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Earning the money that puts food on my kid's table, and a roof over my head is just as much part of being a parent as building legos with my kid.
It’s not though. And I’m saying this as a WOHM. I did SAH when my kid was 0-3, and there is a lot more parenting going on. A lot. As WOHMs we outsource an important part of parenting. It serves a purpose as kids get older bc they need socialization and structure but no one is ever going to convince me that going to an office and earning money is just as much a part of parenting. By those standards, why don’t you just send a check to your DH weekly? I choose to work but I’m self aware enough to know that someone else is doing the lion’s share of parenting from 9-6 daily.
Anonymous wrote:It’s just the truth. If you work, childcare is not your full time job. You are not a childcare provider during work hours, you have hired childcare providers.
Qould it make you feel better if she said “I’m a full-time childcare provider”? She just subbed in “mom”
Yes, every mom is a mom all the time, but not all moms are their child’s full-time childcare provider.
Would you prefer for stay at home parents to refer to themselves as moms who work as child care providers? Would that hurt your feelings less?