Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a single mom for a while, now remarried (after four years as a single mom).
For me:
The financial hardship - this was pronounced for me as I was a trailing spouse overseas and a SAHM who had to find FT work right after relocating back to the US (with a toddler and a baby, so exorbitant childcare costs). I am still paying the price for this via a bankruptcy.
The perception, which went along with the newfound poverty. People are judgmental, especially women who don’t want you around their husbands, who they just know you’re trying to steal away from them. And you’re “easy.” (I was young, thin, and cute which didn’t help.)
Dating was actually fine, as fine as can be in this era.
Mostly though just the lack of any support (I was broke and had no family help which exacerbated this feeling). No margin for error and absolutely everything fell on me - their dad was a day’s travel away.
How old were you?
Anonymous wrote:I was trying to tell my friend that being a single mom is NOT a good idea! I know because I am one lol.
For me is mostly financially challenging, and she has money so she doesn't feel that resonates.
I think also though if you don't have a partner to help with the balance (yin/yang energies) you feel depleted energetically trying for multiple roles, all on your own.
I think women who 'choose' to be a single mother have no idea what they're getting into, but clearly I am biased.
What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:I was a single mom for a while, now remarried (after four years as a single mom).
For me:
The financial hardship - this was pronounced for me as I was a trailing spouse overseas and a SAHM who had to find FT work right after relocating back to the US (with a toddler and a baby, so exorbitant childcare costs). I am still paying the price for this via a bankruptcy.
The perception, which went along with the newfound poverty. People are judgmental, especially women who don’t want you around their husbands, who they just know you’re trying to steal away from them. And you’re “easy.” (I was young, thin, and cute which didn’t help.)
Dating was actually fine, as fine as can be in this era.
Mostly though just the lack of any support (I was broke and had no family help which exacerbated this feeling). No margin for error and absolutely everything fell on me - their dad was a day’s travel away.
Anonymous wrote:You know how people always post about their spouse wanting to handle things differently with their child than they do and then they argue about it? Well, the good thing about being a single mom is I never have to argue. Everything gets done my way because I'm in charge.
The hardest thing is also that - I have to handle EVERYTHING. The mental and physical load all the time, no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:80% of being a parent is logistics/cleaning/discipline - not the stuff you dream of when having a baby.
so, doing all the logistics/cleaning/discipline on your own becomes overwhelming and you then feel like you do nothing but work and kid tasks.
I'm recently separated, with schoolage kids and feel a bit like I'm drowning without help. I need to revert to getting a full-time nanny/house manager again.
How do you not have help when you say you are separated. That means there is another parent.
Anonymous wrote:80% of being a parent is logistics/cleaning/discipline - not the stuff you dream of when having a baby.
so, doing all the logistics/cleaning/discipline on your own becomes overwhelming and you then feel like you do nothing but work and kid tasks.
I'm recently separated, with schoolage kids and feel a bit like I'm drowning without help. I need to revert to getting a full-time nanny/house manager again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is beyond stupid and extraordinarily selfish. Widowed and divorced women are not single moms because they still have an ex or family. Also, do not think that children of single women do not suffer socially.
So, now we are defining single mom to not include widows?
Are single moms with families included?