Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
We know several families with either SAHDs (less common, and usually only very young kids) or “dads who are the primary caregivers and have hobby jobs” (we know way more of these). High earning wives, several kids, & the husbands do things like work at the golf course part time, fix up classic luxury cars for sale, small scale house flipping. Biweekly cleaning help. Honestly, the moms/wives seem extremely happy. However, the two dads like this that we know best are neat freaks (to the point that it is a running joke). One of them is also a really really good cook. Most men probably would not want to do these things. Maybe it is strange that we seem to know several, but we do!
It's hard to imagine a neat freak husband who is an excellent cook. I suppose under those circumstances, maybe I'd be okay with it, but I would still get jealous if I had a nonworking spouse who got to spend more time with the kids.
Why?
The reason my DH wanted me to stay at home was because he did not want our kids to be raised by others. He did not want them to HAVE to go to a summer camp if they wanted to have leisurely summer break. He did not want them to catch the school bus in the dreary cold mornings if a parent was available to drive them to school in heated car. He wanted the presence of a parent in the house to provide them with a sense of security and calm even when they grew up. He wanted to provide a better quality of life for the children because we had the money to do so. And this money was able to buy for our children more time with parent/parents. He wanted to have a domestic staff to take care of the dreary stuff that is needed to run a home - cleaning, laundry, food prep etc, so that the parents had more time and energy to spend with the kids.
Well off people understand the value a SAH spouse can bring to the wellbeing of the family.
Why? Because I prefer spending time with my kids to working, so if DH got to enjoy more time with them, I would resent him. I want that role.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
We know several families with either SAHDs (less common, and usually only very young kids) or “dads who are the primary caregivers and have hobby jobs” (we know way more of these). High earning wives, several kids, & the husbands do things like work at the golf course part time, fix up classic luxury cars for sale, small scale house flipping. Biweekly cleaning help. Honestly, the moms/wives seem extremely happy. However, the two dads like this that we know best are neat freaks (to the point that it is a running joke). One of them is also a really really good cook. Most men probably would not want to do these things. Maybe it is strange that we seem to know several, but we do!
It's hard to imagine a neat freak husband who is an excellent cook. I suppose under those circumstances, maybe I'd be okay with it, but I would still get jealous if I had a nonworking spouse who got to spend more time with the kids.
Why?
The reason my DH wanted me to stay at home was because he did not want our kids to be raised by others. He did not want them to HAVE to go to a summer camp if they wanted to have leisurely summer break. He did not want them to catch the school bus in the dreary cold mornings if a parent was available to drive them to school in heated car. He wanted the presence of a parent in the house to provide them with a sense of security and calm even when they grew up. He wanted to provide a better quality of life for the children because we had the money to do so. And this money was able to buy for our children more time with parent/parents. He wanted to have a domestic staff to take care of the dreary stuff that is needed to run a home - cleaning, laundry, food prep etc, so that the parents had more time and energy to spend with the kids.
Well off people understand the value a SAH spouse can bring to the wellbeing of the family.
Why? Because I prefer spending time with my kids to working, so if DH got to enjoy more time with them, I would resent him. I want that role.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
Since I wouldn’t be attracted to a man who wants to live like that, it’s a moot point.
What’s wrong with you being happy with your set-up, and I’ll be happy with mine? Why the need to pick apart what works for me? I’m not doing it back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
We know several families with either SAHDs (less common, and usually only very young kids) or “dads who are the primary caregivers and have hobby jobs” (we know way more of these). High earning wives, several kids, & the husbands do things like work at the golf course part time, fix up classic luxury cars for sale, small scale house flipping. Biweekly cleaning help. Honestly, the moms/wives seem extremely happy. However, the two dads like this that we know best are neat freaks (to the point that it is a running joke). One of them is also a really really good cook. Most men probably would not want to do these things. Maybe it is strange that we seem to know several, but we do!
It's hard to imagine a neat freak husband who is an excellent cook. I suppose under those circumstances, maybe I'd be okay with it, but I would still get jealous if I had a nonworking spouse who got to spend more time with the kids.
Why?
The reason my DH wanted me to stay at home was because he did not want our kids to be raised by others. He did not want them to HAVE to go to a summer camp if they wanted to have leisurely summer break. He did not want them to catch the school bus in the dreary cold mornings if a parent was available to drive them to school in heated car. He wanted the presence of a parent in the house to provide them with a sense of security and calm even when they grew up. He wanted to provide a better quality of life for the children because we had the money to do so. And this money was able to buy for our children more time with parent/parents. He wanted to have a domestic staff to take care of the dreary stuff that is needed to run a home - cleaning, laundry, food prep etc, so that the parents had more time and energy to spend with the kids.
Well off people understand the value a SAH spouse can bring to the wellbeing of the family.
Why? Because I prefer spending time with my kids to working, so if DH got to enjoy more time with them, I would resent him. I want that role.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a sahm when kids were young and DH has always said he’s happy as long as I’m happy and would support me in working or not working.
I don’t know if anyone can relate but I actually started to feel resentful. Not towards him necessarily but I felt like people didn’t see me as smart or capable; like I was just an extension of my successful and hardworking DH. He definitely didn’t see me that way and it’s not as though anyone said this, I just didn’t like the was I was showing up in the world anymore.
I should add, I think plenty of sahms take on wonderful projects in the community and use the time to do all kinds of creative and interesting things, I just personally never did. I felt too much like I was only valued as a wife and mom, not as an individual.
OP here. Came back and saw lots of interesting new responses in the past few days. I happen to think my friends who sahm and live leisurely lives are very smart. I fully respect and value the decision to stay at home and raise kids - I would do it myself in a heartbeat but financially it’s too risky for us. I also have SAHM friends who were active in volunteer opportunities throughout the preschool years and then went back to work afterwards.
It’s the leisure sahms I wonder about. The outsourcing childcare and spending days relaxing or by the pool, running silly errands at the mall. Not spending much more time with the kids than a working parent. My husband wouldn’t resent me staying home with our kids or even volunteering but I think he would absolutely be turned off if our kids were in school full time, I was having someone else shuttle the kids around, and I wasn’t even doing anything meaningful on a volunteer basis. He doesn’t get the idleness component, or why some people feel entitled to have a spouse support them if they’re not pulling their weight at home either.
as I’ve considered it more, and based on this thread, it sounds like for some very wealthy people or people who’s jobs are very demanding, having a stay at home spouse can make their own life less stressful since they like their career and don’t want to have to balance a spouses career, and they don’t really care what their wife does since they don’t need the money, even if it means their wife has a lot of free time
Anonymous wrote:DH’s leisurely WFH job is 68% of our household income and he does 60% of the errands and workweek chores. I don’t resent him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
We know several families with either SAHDs (less common, and usually only very young kids) or “dads who are the primary caregivers and have hobby jobs” (we know way more of these). High earning wives, several kids, & the husbands do things like work at the golf course part time, fix up classic luxury cars for sale, small scale house flipping. Biweekly cleaning help. Honestly, the moms/wives seem extremely happy. However, the two dads like this that we know best are neat freaks (to the point that it is a running joke). One of them is also a really really good cook. Most men probably would not want to do these things. Maybe it is strange that we seem to know several, but we do!
It's hard to imagine a neat freak husband who is an excellent cook. I suppose under those circumstances, maybe I'd be okay with it, but I would still get jealous if I had a nonworking spouse who got to spend more time with the kids.
Why?
The reason my DH wanted me to stay at home was because he did not want our kids to be raised by others. He did not want them to HAVE to go to a summer camp if they wanted to have leisurely summer break. He did not want them to catch the school bus in the dreary cold mornings if a parent was available to drive them to school in heated car. He wanted the presence of a parent in the house to provide them with a sense of security and calm even when they grew up. He wanted to provide a better quality of life for the children because we had the money to do so. And this money was able to buy for our children more time with parent/parents. He wanted to have a domestic staff to take care of the dreary stuff that is needed to run a home - cleaning, laundry, food prep etc, so that the parents had more time and energy to spend with the kids.
Well off people understand the value a SAH spouse can bring to the wellbeing of the family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I resented it, and it wasn't a joint decision. She just decided to mostly not work during the marriage, including the 10 years before we had a child.
Why would you put up with that though?! 10yrs before you even had kids? Bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:I was a sahm when kids were young and DH has always said he’s happy as long as I’m happy and would support me in working or not working.
I don’t know if anyone can relate but I actually started to feel resentful. Not towards him necessarily but I felt like people didn’t see me as smart or capable; like I was just an extension of my successful and hardworking DH. He definitely didn’t see me that way and it’s not as though anyone said this, I just didn’t like the was I was showing up in the world anymore.
I should add, I think plenty of sahms take on wonderful projects in the community and use the time to do all kinds of creative and interesting things, I just personally never did. I felt too much like I was only valued as a wife and mom, not as an individual.
Anonymous wrote:I stayed home for many years and DH was grateful for it. But when the kids were older he did seem more resentful and made comments about how much everyone in the house slept. Then once I did go back to work, he would make comments when I would try to nap on the weekends because I was so exhausted from the work week. Sometimes I really hate him.
Yes, he sounds hateful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m wouldn’t be resentful because that’s not the type of life I want.
I’m proud of my accomplishments, which include having a successful full time job as well as a well-running house (without outside help). I love the life I lead and I find meaning and value in it.
I would be bored leading the type of life you describe.
Why is working full-time and running a house without outside help a badge of honor? That's a double shift, and I don't envy you.
And I’m not asking you to. I’m a driven person and always have been. I like being busy, and I like having goals to achieve. Work and parenting do that for me.
The thread asked if I’d be jealous or resentful of people who stay home and focus on themselves. The answer is no.
I don’t ask for pity or a prize. I’m happy being me. Go be happy being you.
Would you be happy if your spouse stayed home and lived a leisurely life while you continued to work and ran the home? That is the question, and I suspect most driven women would say no.
We know several families with either SAHDs (less common, and usually only very young kids) or “dads who are the primary caregivers and have hobby jobs” (we know way more of these). High earning wives, several kids, & the husbands do things like work at the golf course part time, fix up classic luxury cars for sale, small scale house flipping. Biweekly cleaning help. Honestly, the moms/wives seem extremely happy. However, the two dads like this that we know best are neat freaks (to the point that it is a running joke). One of them is also a really really good cook. Most men probably would not want to do these things. Maybe it is strange that we seem to know several, but we do!
It's hard to imagine a neat freak husband who is an excellent cook. I suppose under those circumstances, maybe I'd be okay with it, but I would still get jealous if I had a nonworking spouse who got to spend more time with the kids.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH prefers I stay home, even though our kids are teenagers. His life is so much better. I enjoy cooking. He never has to worry about laundry, errands, housework, even yardwork (which he doesn't like to do). He can work late and travel for work whenever he wants, which has benefitted his career immensely. I can't imagine him ever thinking about being resentful.
Of course not. He has all that time to bang his co-worker too.