Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
Clueless premise. One-income families (e.g., father works, mother stays home) started disappearing in the late 70s, were in free-fall in the 80s, and gone by the 90s. The another 30 years went by. The corporations won.
https://www.epi.org/publication/charting-wage-stagnation/
Hate to break it to you but SAHMs are alive and well in higher education, higher income areas. My neighborhood and my sister's neighborhood are full of them, and we live several states apart.
SAHM w 2-4 kids is common in the south where you sorority sister marry a frat guy who will work for his dad.
Not common on the east or west coast.
Hahahaha. Says the poor. It's 100% alive and real among very well educated women who marry well.
I didn’t see this as a majority nor large minority when we lived and worked in Boston, NYC nor Wash DC.
Only in Dallas.
And I work in tech so never see this in The Bay Area either.
Maybe we’re defining well educated differently or running in different u grad and grad circles, as well as different DC area neighborhoods, schools and kid ECs entirely.
Agree. SAHM w/multiple degrees from elite schools. We are out there but not common.
I don’t know how this turned into an “elite degree” contest. I am one of the early posters and college-educated SAHM’s in the $250k+ household income level are still very very common. Definitely until the youngest starts kindergarten and then some do go back, but usually part-time or flexible. Maybe this is less common among rocket scientists, I don’t know. I live in the suburbs, so maybe it’s a function of that too, but many many families who have the means to make this choice, are.
What you’re missing is that a HHI of $250K is not considered “marrying well” on this board. We are talking about women who can earn $200K+ in their own right (and often much more), most of whom do not choose to SAHM, except some lawyers who really hate big law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate such stupid questions.
Not all women are mothers. Not all mothers want to stay home. Those mothers that do want to stay home, still can.
+1
Now you have the choice - which was the power we gained. No, I don’t think we should give that up.
Anonymous wrote:I am someone who married and had kids late. I worked for many years and had an interesting and challenging career. It was high pressure and exhausting. I loved it but I hated the lifestyle. When I had my first child at 40, I decided to stay home. It hit me one day at work that I could be hit by a bus and they’d just assign my projects to someone else. I, like everyone else, was dispensable. That’s when I decided I to give my energy and attention to something that would actually matter more - my child and family. I am glad that I had the opportunity to have a fulfilling career, but I am also grateful that I got to decide when I was ready for a different chapter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
I have not read the thread. This is based on OP.
Women should have thought more on working. Now most costs are based on two family income. Women are expected as housewives and WOH incomes. Thumbs up to Phyllis Schafly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love being married to a high earning man🙌🥂
Ewww you.
Anonymous wrote:Love being married to a high earning man🙌🥂
Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
Clueless premise. One-income families (e.g., father works, mother stays home) started disappearing in the late 70s, were in free-fall in the 80s, and gone by the 90s. The another 30 years went by. The corporations won.
https://www.epi.org/publication/charting-wage-stagnation/
Hate to break it to you but SAHMs are alive and well in higher education, higher income areas. My neighborhood and my sister's neighborhood are full of them, and we live several states apart.
SAHM w 2-4 kids is common in the south where you sorority sister marry a frat guy who will work for his dad.
Not common on the east or west coast.
Hahahaha. Says the poor. It's 100% alive and real among very well educated women who marry well.
I didn’t see this as a majority nor large minority when we lived and worked in Boston, NYC nor Wash DC.
Only in Dallas.
And I work in tech so never see this in The Bay Area either.
Maybe we’re defining well educated differently or running in different u grad and grad circles, as well as different DC area neighborhoods, schools and kid ECs entirely.
Agree. SAHM w/multiple degrees from elite schools. We are out there but not common.
I don’t know how this turned into an “elite degree” contest. I am one of the early posters and college-educated SAHM’s in the $250k+ household income level are still very very common. Definitely until the youngest starts kindergarten and then some do go back, but usually part-time or flexible. Maybe this is less common among rocket scientists, I don’t know. I live in the suburbs, so maybe it’s a function of that too, but many many families who have the means to make this choice, are.
It's not a contest. We are just sharing our various experiences within our own peer groups.
It's not that common in my circles. <10%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM, I would love it if most women were still SAHMs. There would be more people around and we could do more things during the day like PTO, book clubs, lunches, etc. Also there wouldn't be this pressure to "go back to work" when the kids are older the way there is now. I've managed to work just very part time at a school, but I feel like there is this expectation that because my kids are older I should be back at work. Also, if most families only had one income, there would be less of a competitive "arms race" so to speak on buying kids stuff and experiences. Housing and other prices wouldn't have been driven so high either.
But mostly I would just love it if I were EXPECTED to stay at home, rather than bucking some trend.
I get what you are saying. I think the problem now is that you are kind of considered a loser if you “only” aspire to take care of your family, home, etc. And now if you do that without marrying a male 1%er, you are putting your family at a distinct disadvantage financially relative to all the dual-earning families. At the same time, do I want to revert to not being able to own property, etc? NO. I also don’t want to be treated as though I’m a smaller less hairy man. I’m not a man! I have different fundamental desires/drives, and one of them is to be the primary caretaker of my kids.
That's more of an American perspective . Lots of international women are proud to be a stay at home mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM, I would love it if most women were still SAHMs. There would be more people around and we could do more things during the day like PTO, book clubs, lunches, etc. Also there wouldn't be this pressure to "go back to work" when the kids are older the way there is now. I've managed to work just very part time at a school, but I feel like there is this expectation that because my kids are older I should be back at work. Also, if most families only had one income, there would be less of a competitive "arms race" so to speak on buying kids stuff and experiences. Housing and other prices wouldn't have been driven so high either.
But mostly I would just love it if I were EXPECTED to stay at home, rather than bucking some trend.
I get what you are saying. I think the problem now is that you are kind of considered a loser if you “only” aspire to take care of your family, home, etc. And now if you do that without marrying a male 1%er, you are putting your family at a distinct disadvantage financially relative to all the dual-earning families. At the same time, do I want to revert to not being able to own property, etc? NO. I also don’t want to be treated as though I’m a smaller less hairy man. I’m not a man! I have different fundamental desires/drives, and one of them is to be the primary caretaker of my kids.
That's more of an American perspective . Lots of international women are proud to be a stay at home mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM, I would love it if most women were still SAHMs. There would be more people around and we could do more things during the day like PTO, book clubs, lunches, etc. Also there wouldn't be this pressure to "go back to work" when the kids are older the way there is now. I've managed to work just very part time at a school, but I feel like there is this expectation that because my kids are older I should be back at work. Also, if most families only had one income, there would be less of a competitive "arms race" so to speak on buying kids stuff and experiences. Housing and other prices wouldn't have been driven so high either.
But mostly I would just love it if I were EXPECTED to stay at home, rather than bucking some trend.
I get what you are saying. I think the problem now is that you are kind of considered a loser if you “only” aspire to take care of your family, home, etc. And now if you do that without marrying a male 1%er, you are putting your family at a distinct disadvantage financially relative to all the dual-earning families. At the same time, do I want to revert to not being able to own property, etc? NO. I also don’t want to be treated as though I’m a smaller less hairy man. I’m not a man! I have different fundamental desires/drives, and one of them is to be the primary caretaker of my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
Clueless premise. One-income families (e.g., father works, mother stays home) started disappearing in the late 70s, were in free-fall in the 80s, and gone by the 90s. The another 30 years went by. The corporations won.
https://www.epi.org/publication/charting-wage-stagnation/
Hate to break it to you but SAHMs are alive and well in higher education, higher income areas. My neighborhood and my sister's neighborhood are full of them, and we live several states apart.
SAHM w 2-4 kids is common in the south where you sorority sister marry a frat guy who will work for his dad.
Not common on the east or west coast.
Hahahaha. Says the poor. It's 100% alive and real among very well educated women who marry well.
I didn’t see this as a majority nor large minority when we lived and worked in Boston, NYC nor Wash DC.
Only in Dallas.
And I work in tech so never see this in The Bay Area either.
Maybe we’re defining well educated differently or running in different u grad and grad circles, as well as different DC area neighborhoods, schools and kid ECs entirely.
Agree. SAHM w/multiple degrees from elite schools. We are out there but not common.
I don’t know how this turned into an “elite degree” contest. I am one of the early posters and college-educated SAHM’s in the $250k+ household income level are still very very common. Definitely until the youngest starts kindergarten and then some do go back, but usually part-time or flexible. Maybe this is less common among rocket scientists, I don’t know. I live in the suburbs, so maybe it’s a function of that too, but many many families who have the means to make this choice, are.