Anonymous wrote:It all comes from insecurity. Meaning, women who judge SAHMs (and vice-versa) are insecure about their life choices and are threatened by those who don't make the same choices. They need you to do the same to validate their choice.
- biglaw partner who would walk away from all of it if I could to spend more time with the family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you WOH you have to be at work otherwise you are fired, other people are relying on you to do your job. You still have to maintain the household. You contribute to society by paying tax.
If you SAH if you don't feel like vacuuming one day you can chill out, watch netflix and do it the next day. Nobody cares. Getting your nails done, making sure your hair roots are touched up and meeting friends for coffee are hardly contributing to society. Making sure your husband is fed in the morning helps nobody but your immediate family.
I am not jealous of SAHM's. Each to their own. But it's not a job, it's a lifestyle choice. Own it don't try to make it into something it's not, that's what annoys everyone else.
Netflix and nails is the modern soap operas and bon bons.
Seriously, there are countless benefits to having a sahp. A critical one is that someone is there to care for sick kids, etc so that the parent who works doesn't miss work. As a sahm, I have stepped up to provide care for my woh friends' kids and neighbor's kids on snow days and half days, enabling them to not miss work.
Anonymous wrote:If you WOH you have to be at work otherwise you are fired, other people are relying on you to do your job. You still have to maintain the household. You contribute to society by paying tax.
If you SAH if you don't feel like vacuuming one day you can chill out, watch netflix and do it the next day. Nobody cares. Getting your nails done, making sure your hair roots are touched up and meeting friends for coffee are hardly contributing to society. Making sure your husband is fed in the morning helps nobody but your immediate family.
I am not jealous of SAHM's. Each to their own. But it's not a job, it's a lifestyle choice. Own it don't try to make it into something it's not, that's what annoys everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t say it to your face but I agree with her.
- Independently wealthy and working in a meaningful job
+1. When some SAHMs boastfully list the things they get accomplished, I do all that, have all the kids and work, so I'm kind of embarrassed for people who say "oh, I WORK! I'm a SAHM!" Yeahhhh, I do all that too, and actually work so.... I mean, get another advanced degree, do charity work or improve something for god's sake. Something important, not hair/nails- I can't believe someone listed that here as a regularily scheduled accomplishment. That's basic grooming- stop congratulating yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird to me that so many people value work this much. Most people I know either dislike their jobs, or like them but still look forward to retiring. We’ve been through every variation. I’ve worked. I’ve been a single working parent. I’ve had a SAH DH. I’ve been a SAHM. Each had pros and cons. Why do some of you care? Seems like you just want to feel superior.
Some people have no imagination. They cannot imagine that someone who makes different choices than they made could possibly be "doing it right." As one PP so bitterly put it, they must "suck at life" because their life is different. These are the same kinds of people of never learned to "walk in another's shoes." They, and their attitudes, are a huge root problem in our society.
Anonymous wrote:To be fair, I didn’t read OPs post but you should be judged. You’re just a fret on society trading comfort to your husband for a house and being lazy all day.
Cheers!
Anonymous wrote:If you WOH you have to be at work otherwise you are fired, other people are relying on you to do your job. You still have to maintain the household. You contribute to society by paying tax.
If you SAH if you don't feel like vacuuming one day you can chill out, watch netflix and do it the next day. Nobody cares. Getting your nails done, making sure your hair roots are touched up and meeting friends for coffee are hardly contributing to society. Making sure your husband is fed in the morning helps nobody but your immediate family.
I am not jealous of SAHM's. Each to their own. But it's not a job, it's a lifestyle choice. Own it don't try to make it into something it's not, that's what annoys everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I were both professionals with demanding jobs before my husband retired. He retired young from a government job, and we moved to a quieter area. He’s now working a job related to a hobby, and I’m currently staying home. It works for us, and I’m genuinely happy. I can honestly say that I’ve been asked the “when are you going back to work” and “what do you do all day” questions, but I’ve never felt outwardly judged before today.
An acquaintance basically told me that I need to ‘get it together and find a job, even if it does pay peanuts’. Although I never like to or feel the need to defend my choices to anyone, after I explained the ways my not currently working benefit our family, I was met with how ‘it must be terrible for my husband to buy his own Christmas and birthday gifts’. At the time, I was laughing inside, because what an odd response. But she persisted, and went on and on about the ways her working benefited her family, none of which are applicable to our situation. In the end, she rolled her eyes and changed the subject.
It was such an odd interaction. As someone who has been on both ends of the spectrum, I can see the motivation for both sides. I’d never judge, because I’ve been there. But I can’t wrap my head around this woman’s motivation for attacking me to my face. Anyone experience this before?
(Also, if you’re coming here to troll and bash SAHM, you needn’t respond. I will pass right by your comment and I encourage others to do the same.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t say it to your face but I agree with her.
- Independently wealthy and working in a meaningful job
+1. When some SAHMs boastfully list the things they get accomplished, I do all that, have all the kids and work, so I'm kind of embarrassed for people who say "oh, I WORK! I'm a SAHM!" Yeahhhh, I do all that too, and actually work so.... I mean, get another advanced degree, do charity work or improve something for god's sake. Something important, not hair/nails- I can't believe someone listed that here as a regularily scheduled accomplishment. That's basic grooming- stop congratulating yourself.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t say it to your face but I agree with her.
- Independently wealthy and working in a meaningful job
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work out (Pilates, yoga, barre, and spin).
The days I do Pilates I generally take 2 classes - Pilates first, then spin.
I read a lot.
I meet people for lunch or coffee including my husbands and friends who work. We meet up during their breaks.
I do self care: hair and nail appointments. I have to get my roots touched up every 2 weeks.
I clean, do laundry, run errands, etc. so our weekends are totally free. We go skiing a lot in the winter and hiking in the summer in the Finger Lakes area (we live in upstate NY).
After school I run the kids around to their activities.
We have 4 kids so I’m pretty busy.
I want your life!
If laundry and nails are a life, sure.
I guess you missed the part where she said she has FOUR kids, a husband, a social life, and lots of hobbies
Four kids in school or out is a full time job! The amount of jealously is sad.
Don’t forget the roots - they HAVE to be done every 2 weeks.