Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
This may be what is happening. Less about sahm/no sahm than about the grandparents (the grandma often) and their role.
My grandma (from Taiwan) watched her grandkids. My aunt watches her grandkids. My aunt is part of a whole *community* in her city of UMC educated women who watch their grandkids. They do Chinese new year stuff together with the grandkids on the weekdays, take them to enrichment activities together, go for stroller walks together etc. Beung a part of this community is a really big deal to my aunt.
I have a good friend who is Taiwanese. He parents left her with the grandparents while her parents worked. The dad was a doctor and mom was a nurse. The parents would come get her on weekends. My friend is very resentful of this.
I also have other Asian friends who either lived apart or were frequently dropped off at grandparents and it seems like a painful memory from their childhood. They also have an extra hard time when grandparents pass because they were the primary.
Painful? It doesn’t have to be, it can be beautiful and nurturing. My grandmas played a big role in raising me and it was not painful at all. One is still alive and healthy and I’m in my 40s. But even if she passed earlier, that’s no reason not to form a bond and not to be grateful for the time you had. I also have a good relationship with my parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
This may be what is happening. Less about sahm/no sahm than about the grandparents (the grandma often) and their role.
My grandma (from Taiwan) watched her grandkids. My aunt watches her grandkids. My aunt is part of a whole *community* in her city of UMC educated women who watch their grandkids. They do Chinese new year stuff together with the grandkids on the weekdays, take them to enrichment activities together, go for stroller walks together etc. Beung a part of this community is a really big deal to my aunt.
I have a good friend who is Taiwanese. He parents left her with the grandparents while her parents worked. The dad was a doctor and mom was a nurse. The parents would come get her on weekends. My friend is very resentful of this.
I also have other Asian friends who either lived apart or were frequently dropped off at grandparents and it seems like a painful memory from their childhood. They also have an extra hard time when grandparents pass because they were the primary.
Painful? It doesn’t have to be, it can be beautiful and nurturing. My grandmas played a big role in raising me and it was not painful at all. One is still alive and healthy and I’m in my 40s. But even if she passed earlier, that’s no reason not to form a bond and not to be grateful for the time you had. I also have a good relationship with my parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
This may be what is happening. Less about sahm/no sahm than about the grandparents (the grandma often) and their role.
My grandma (from Taiwan) watched her grandkids. My aunt watches her grandkids. My aunt is part of a whole *community* in her city of UMC educated women who watch their grandkids. They do Chinese new year stuff together with the grandkids on the weekdays, take them to enrichment activities together, go for stroller walks together etc. Beung a part of this community is a really big deal to my aunt.
I have a good friend who is Taiwanese. He parents left her with the grandparents while her parents worked. The dad was a doctor and mom was a nurse. The parents would come get her on weekends. My friend is very resentful of this.
I also have other Asian friends who either lived apart or were frequently dropped off at grandparents and it seems like a painful memory from their childhood. They also have an extra hard time when grandparents pass because they were the primary.
Anonymous wrote:Women of my mother and grandmother’s generation admired those who could stay at home because their husbands made enough money. They would mildly pity the married women who had to work to afford the standard of living they wanted. We are Indian, btw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
This may be what is happening. Less about sahm/no sahm than about the grandparents (the grandma often) and their role.
My grandma (from Taiwan) watched her grandkids. My aunt watches her grandkids. My aunt is part of a whole *community* in her city of UMC educated women who watch their grandkids. They do Chinese new year stuff together with the grandkids on the weekdays, take them to enrichment activities together, go for stroller walks together etc. Beung a part of this community is a really big deal to my aunt.
Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
Anonymous wrote:My Filipino grandmother and mother both worked. It was my grandmother's career at the World Bank that brought her to the US. It was the men who stayed home bc they couldn't find work here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family reveres a highly educated SAHM.
I’m Korean American. All my relatives in Korea stay home. They study hard to go a top university to marry well and they all stayed home when they had a baby. I’m married to a physician and I also stay home. My mother seems to approve of my life. In Japanese and Korean cultures, it is preferred that the mom stay home to raise the children. I don’t think it is the same for Chinese or Indians although the uber rich don’t seem to work.
I have a couple of nieces who are married to doctors staying home and raising kids. The arrangement seems to work fine for now. Personally, I don't want my daughter to follow that path if possible. I don't want her to rely on man to support her and become her lifeline.
Anonymous wrote:In some families it’s expected that the moms will work and the grandparents will take care of the kids. Maybe that’s how those grandparents expected things to go and are mad they don’t get to be with the grandkids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family reveres a highly educated SAHM.
I’m Korean American. All my relatives in Korea stay home. They study hard to go a top university to marry well and they all stayed home when they had a baby. I’m married to a physician and I also stay home. My mother seems to approve of my life. In Japanese and Korean cultures, it is preferred that the mom stay home to raise the children. I don’t think it is the same for Chinese or Indians although the uber rich don’t seem to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are five billion Asians. You can’t possibly group them altogether. Each family’s preferences and opinions will vary.
This. What is the common sense on this topic among all the countries on the American continent, including South America?!
Anonymous wrote:There are five billion Asians. You can’t possibly group them altogether. Each family’s preferences and opinions will vary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family reveres a highly educated SAHM.
I’m Korean American. All my relatives in Korea stay home. They study hard to go a top university to marry well and they all stayed home when they had a baby. I’m married to a physician and I also stay home. My mother seems to approve of my life. In Japanese and Korean cultures, it is preferred that the mom stay home to raise the children. I don’t think it is the same for Chinese or Indians although the uber rich don’t seem to work.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for all your replies! As I suspected, it must be something more to do with this particular family than Chinese or Asian culture as a whole. Or perhaps it is an immigrant mentality.