Anonymous wrote:I have several good friends who stay at home. One has forever, one recently left their job. Both have kids in school full time, and one has a nanny as well. They both have cleaning help.
Both of them live very leisurely lives. Manicures, gym, lunches, beauty appointments, watching tv, going to the pool by themselves during the summer while kids are in day camp, etc.
My friend without the nanny is however, constantly shuttling her kids around, cooking full dinners etc - so a slightly less leisurely life. The one with a nanny truly seems to relax most of the time, nanny does the kids activities etc.
My husband would be okay if stayed home with our kids, but would absolutely resent it if I stayed home and relaxed all day while outsourcing all childcare and not contributing to our finances. And I’d probably resent him in the reverse scenario. How does this dynamic play out in marriages? Even if the spouses are relatively high earners, do they care?
I am not asking about stay at home parents of young kids or stay at home parents who don’t have full time nannies - their life is a grind, too. I am talking about stay at home parents who focus on themselves most of the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're resentful of spouses who get paid to "work" from home and do nothing.
DH calls me a SAHM with a paycheck. I've been working from home for the 15 years. I make a decent salary and am able to do kid pick up/drop off, laundry, grocery shop, and get dinner ready. He thinks it great. I look at us as a partnership. The more stuff I get done around the house when I'm home, the more family time we have.
Anonymous wrote:My brother works all day and then has to go home and make dinner because his stay at home wife doesn’t ever cook. I would resent that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot speak for all DHs, but mine is not resentful. He has a high paying job filled with all the recognition, external praise and social interaction that comes along with it -which he loves. In addition, he has a smoking hot, educated wife who works out, gets pedicures, eats well, cooks healthy meals for the family, shuttles kids to and from appointments/ sports practice/ etc, can stay home with the kids at the drop of a hat (sicknesses, last minute work trips etc), takes on the brunt of our kids’ emotional needs, physical needs, mental needs etc etc etc. Bottom line is: neither of us are resentful. I appreciate what he brings to the table. He appreciates what I bring to the table. In fact, it is him who often reminds me that I do work. I just don’t get a paycheck.
+1. Each person feeling like they are receiving the better end of the deal results in marital happiness. Some men, like my DH, weren’t looking for a wife with a big paycheck because he can easily provide for a family by himself. He wanted a wife who wanted to stay home and manage the house. Our roles are clear cut and it works for us.
Anonymous wrote:I actually think it is friends who post on DCUM who are jealous of their friends who are SAH parents.
Anonymous wrote:Staying home and relaxing all day sounds like a recipe for depression. For me anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot speak for all DHs, but mine is not resentful. He has a high paying job filled with all the recognition, external praise and social interaction that comes along with it -which he loves. In addition, he has a smoking hot, educated wife who works out, gets pedicures, eats well, cooks healthy meals for the family, shuttles kids to and from appointments/ sports practice/ etc, can stay home with the kids at the drop of a hat (sicknesses, last minute work trips etc), takes on the brunt of our kids’ emotional needs, physical needs, mental needs etc etc etc. Bottom line is: neither of us are resentful. I appreciate what he brings to the table. He appreciates what I bring to the table. In fact, it is him who often reminds me that I do work. I just don’t get a paycheck.
+1. Each person feeling like they are receiving the better end of the deal results in marital happiness. Some men, like my DH, weren’t looking for a wife with a big paycheck because he can easily provide for a family by himself. He wanted a wife who wanted to stay home and manage the house. Our roles are clear cut and it works for us.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot speak for all DHs, but mine is not resentful. He has a high paying job filled with all the recognition, external praise and social interaction that comes along with it -which he loves. In addition, he has a smoking hot, educated wife who works out, gets pedicures, eats well, cooks healthy meals for the family, shuttles kids to and from appointments/ sports practice/ etc, can stay home with the kids at the drop of a hat (sicknesses, last minute work trips etc), takes on the brunt of our kids’ emotional needs, physical needs, mental needs etc etc etc. Bottom line is: neither of us are resentful. I appreciate what he brings to the table. He appreciates what I bring to the table. In fact, it is him who often reminds me that I do work. I just don’t get a paycheck.
Anonymous wrote:I would resent this, and I would hope my spouse would resent it.
I know there are men who feel this way. I think it speaks volumes of what men think about women if they genuinely don't care what their spouse does all day. Men who think this just don't think about their spouses are peers or partners or of having much value. That arrangement and value system works in some marriages; it wouldn't work for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH doesn’t seem to care what I do so long as I am happy.
Would you be happy as long as he is happy? So if he was happy not working, you would be fine with that?