Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't sweat this. People don't care as much as you think they do.
If career as identity is important to you, you can say "I was in arts management and my degree is in art history. But I stopped doing that in 2017 and pivoted to being with the kids more."
The SAHMs that are irritating are the ones who are "I am so so so busy! PTA this! Carpool that! Laundry! Birthday party! I'm busy!" as if all moms aren't busy with those things. Who cares. It's not the SAHM that's irksome, it's the insecurity and competitive nature of some SAHMs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I meet lots of SAHM’s and don’t think twice about it. I do wonder what they do with seemingly much greater amounts of time available but don’t ask.
Hobbies. Same things you do in your free time, they just have more of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I meet lots of SAHM’s and don’t think twice about it. I do wonder what they do with seemingly much greater amounts of time available but don’t ask.
+1 I doubt that people are being this rude when they meet OP. She just sounds insecure. Not sure what PPD has to do with SAHM for school age kids. It was just a detail that made me feel like OP feels very defensive about her choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I meet lots of SAHM’s and don’t think twice about it. I do wonder what they do with seemingly much greater amounts of time available but don’t ask.
I think it’s very time consuming to keep the house super clean and organized, cook great meals and manage the outdoor landscaping too. Im not sure why that can’t be a full time job. (I WOH but I know what I’d do if I didn’t work!)
I have only wondered about some of my sahm neighbors whose lives are always so disorganized (and I mean like 15 loads of laundry piled high in their laundry room). Maybe they’d be better off working so they could hire a cleaning lady and a lawn guy. My neighbors son really wanted to go to preschool too and they couldn’t afford it.
Just own it op. If you don’t need to work, that’s a wonderful luxury for your family. As long as it’s to the benefit of your family and not the detriment, you’re golden.
Anonymous wrote:I meet lots of SAHM’s and don’t think twice about it. I do wonder what they do with seemingly much greater amounts of time available but don’t ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Due to many different circumstances, most nobody’s business (for the sake of this post, I stopped working after experiencing severe postpartum depression, and since DH could and can fully support us comfortably, I haven’t gone back and don’t really want to right now) I am a housewife now that my children are in school full-time, and have been for a couple years.
*I am posting this with sincerity, so please be polite with me!
I never know what to say when new people ask what I do for a living. Or, I do, but it always seems to make things awkward or makes people (both men and women, though in different ways) very defensive (“I could never do that! What do you do all day? Aren’t you bored? I’d lose my mind and go insane.”) Part of me wants to tell these women I WAS sort of insane, certifiably, and that’s why stopped working, but why start a fight? I always just let them spew their thoughts in my direction because it’s easier, but I’m sort of sick of it.
I’m sick of explaining why I haven’t gone back to work now that my kids are in school. Sick of trying to sugar coat why I stopped working. Sick of explaining to people that I do find fulfillment in other ways. REALLY tired of the people who try and tell me how THEY would feel.
Does anyone have any advice? What would YOU want to hear from me?
Just say "I am not working at the moment". No one will care enough to ask a follow up question.