Anonymous wrote:Yup, and I'm pretty vocal about it, i.e.
"Why didn't you do better in school so I wouldn't have to do anything waaahhhhhh,"
and his response is always
"Why didn't you just marry a rich guy?"
and my response is
"Because I was stupid and had low self-esteem!"
Sometimes it's better to just say these things out loud and hear how silly they sound, then resentment doesn't quite build up.
Anonymous wrote:I resent my husband for not letting me stay at home with our DD. I just want to stay at home for the first couple of years. I'd go back once I find a better job and but she is our first and he want to have three to four kids, So I really can't do it. I really don't make enough money and actually spend more going to work once we pay the babysitter then I make. He says he married a working girl and he wants me to stay that way. I love working but lets face it nothing is more important than my DD. The fact we aren't making anything and I don't get to spend the quality time with my child is crazy. I feel sad and depressed while at work. I just wanna scream! He expects to much out of me. Plus my husband never gets up with her during the night.
Anonymous wrote:"I agree that kids can do great in many, many different kinds of scenarios. But does this mean, then that SAHPs are necessarily wasting their time for choosing this path?"
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:"
My kids have been away from both parents 45 to 50 hours a week since the age of three months. I can't see any ill effects in them compared to their friends who grew up with a SAHP from birth.
NP. Not in favor of SAHM over WOH, but this logic is faulty to me and I hear it a lot from WOH parents. You cannot compare outcomes because you cannot do it twice (raise your kid.) And you can't compare to other kids because there are so many other variables that factor in.
Its like the "babies on formula do just fine' from mothers who choose not to breastfeed - so why breastfeed? Are all kids who were formula fed obese, not as smart, not attached, etc? no - so why do so many mothers bother? Are kids whose lives are not supplemented with dance, music, soccer, academic camps, fill in the blank classes destined to work at McDonald's? Of course not. Why do we bother then?
Why do we bother to do anything that we think is good for our kids if said thing does not guarantee a specific outcome?
If parents believe that being a SAHM or SAHD will benefit their kid, they are often faced with the 'you're wasting your time, it makes no difference bc I WOH and my kids are doing great" line or the defensive, "what are you saying about MY kids then??!" from WOH parents.
I agree that kids can do great in many, many different kinds of scenarios. But does this mean, then that SAHPs are necessarily wasting their time for choosing this path?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I resent it and not always so secretly. We had always planned on me staying at home but my career took off when his didn't. He makes less than half of what I do and his salary barely covers daycare. He's just not suited to be a SAHD though and if he did SAH, I would probably be extremely jealous.