Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure envy is the right word, but here goes. I am in favor of every parent and family doing what works for them economically and logistically. I live in an affluent suburb and am quite fortunate to work from home about 30 hours/week, with flexibility to pick my young kids up from the bus stop after school every day. For our family, this setup works really well. I’m super busy with work during the school day, and am able to get the time with my kids after school.
The problem? While I know there are other working moms in my community, none or very few of them are on bus stop duty. Therefore, my socializing with the moms at the bus stop is dominated with conversations revolving around the shopping, lunches out, vacation planning, spa treatments that these ladies seem to fill their days with. When they ask how my day has been and I say “busy with work” it’s a conversation killer. It’s not that I don’t appreciate my setup, but it’s that these are my main socialization moments during the week outside family and work, and to put it mildly - I can’t relate!
What can I do to stop feeling… nit exactly envious… but maybe perturbed? after these interactions?
I call troll.
This is not the conversation the mommies are having -- this "spa treatments" and "shopping" stuff is fantasy dreamed up by either 1) someone who does not stay home with their kids and is filled with rage and jealousy over it because they are unhinged, or 2) someone trying to get everyone here riled up. Also, no convos are stopping because someone says "busy with work" -- plenty of bus stop mommies work part time and can relate. Yeah, I think this is made up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all sound socially incapable or maybe rude. SAHMs are not shocked when other women work. Normal SAHMs would ask you if you’ve been working on anything interesting/challenging/traveling a lot for work recently/changed jobs etc. They know appropriate superficial, work-related questions to ask if your response indicates you want to talk about work for small talk. If they really go silent when you mention work, they sound utterly socially inept.
I think you sound inept and hostile for responding to something as anodyne as “how’s your day” by talking about work. Surely when someone at work in a meeting opens by saying “how’s the morning?” You don’t respond by saying “busy with work.” Why not grant the SAHMs the courtesy of a normal answer to that question.
Lol to this. My kid goes to a school where about 80-90% of the moms are SAHMs and literally none of them have ever asked me any of the above questions or any other questions about work. Literally never. And yes in work meetings if you ask someone how their day is going they will often/usually say “busy”
Anonymous wrote:You all sound socially incapable or maybe rude. SAHMs are not shocked when other women work. Normal SAHMs would ask you if you’ve been working on anything interesting/challenging/traveling a lot for work recently/changed jobs etc. They know appropriate superficial, work-related questions to ask if your response indicates you want to talk about work for small talk. If they really go silent when you mention work, they sound utterly socially inept.
I think you sound inept and hostile for responding to something as anodyne as “how’s your day” by talking about work. Surely when someone at work in a meeting opens by saying “how’s the morning?” You don’t respond by saying “busy with work.” Why not grant the SAHMs the courtesy of a normal answer to that question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk about the weathe, sports or the govt melting down.
I also find it mindnumbing to listen to stories about their errands.
I remember our nanny calling in sick one day so I took my daughter to dance class. I was waiting for class to get out and ended up listening to the moms compare which HomeGoods had better stock and when each HomeGoods restocked so you could go look for the best stuff. I couldn't believe anyone had time for that. Totally mind numbing.
Interesting. I have what is considered a “big job” or whatever but I totally want this intel.
OP could try to find common ground with the other moms. But maybe she doesn’t want to? Does it make her feel superior to dismiss their errands and chores? All of us still have errands and chores unless we are mega rich celebrities (in which case I guess a chore is to pick out the specs on your newest luxury car or something).
We all just need to get over ourselves and find common ground. And by the way, those moms OP is poo pooing often have the best intel on school, teachers, coaches, etc. They have value also cause, you know, they are humans.
They could probably be part of your village if you weren’t so snobby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all sound socially incapable or maybe rude. SAHMs are not shocked when other women work. Normal SAHMs would ask you if you’ve been working on anything interesting/challenging/traveling a lot for work recently/changed jobs etc. They know appropriate superficial, work-related questions to ask if your response indicates you want to talk about work for small talk. If they really go silent when you mention work, they sound utterly socially inept.
I think you sound inept and hostile for responding to something as anodyne as “how’s your day” by talking about work. Surely when someone at work in a meeting opens by saying “how’s the morning?” You don’t respond by saying “busy with work.” Why not grant the SAHMs the courtesy of a normal answer to that question.
I agree with this. I work full time and I don't really want to talk about work with other people. If someone asks how my week or day is I might say mention if I was busy with work but would then re-direct to ask more questions of the other person's day. OP try some back and forth instead of just talking about being busy at work. That is a boring non-conversation starter.
Anonymous wrote:You all sound socially incapable or maybe rude. SAHMs are not shocked when other women work. Normal SAHMs would ask you if you’ve been working on anything interesting/challenging/traveling a lot for work recently/changed jobs etc. They know appropriate superficial, work-related questions to ask if your response indicates you want to talk about work for small talk. If they really go silent when you mention work, they sound utterly socially inept.
I think you sound inept and hostile for responding to something as anodyne as “how’s your day” by talking about work. Surely when someone at work in a meeting opens by saying “how’s the morning?” You don’t respond by saying “busy with work.” Why not grant the SAHMs the courtesy of a normal answer to that question.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I agree with others who have said that you just happen to encounter a very specific type of SAHM- presumably they have a lot of money and/or family support and can outsource to get the amount of disposable time and income they have.
I'm a SAHM with a DH who is on 80% travel, and I don't talk about my life because it's boring and revolves mostly around parenting and chores. Most of the women I see during the week have equally boring lives and I only see them when we're dealing with board meetings or other volunteer work. You don't see us because we are driving in circles, sitting in a conference room going through a budget, or cooking dinner at 2 pm because we're the only parent who can do driving and childcare from 3 pm-bedtime.
I do cross paths with women whose lives you're describing, and they have partners with local jobs and limited travel, local grandparents and siblings that help with driving and childcare, and most importantly, a ton of money. So I think that you're envying the free time and reduced resonsibility that can be bought with money and family support, not specifically SAHM as a concept.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk about the weathe, sports or the govt melting down.
I also find it mindnumbing to listen to stories about their errands.
I remember our nanny calling in sick one day so I took my daughter to dance class. I was waiting for class to get out and ended up listening to the moms compare which HomeGoods had better stock and when each HomeGoods restocked so you could go look for the best stuff. I couldn't believe anyone had time for that. Totally mind numbing.