) I've found a good balance that works for me and my family. She couldn't be more proud.
Anonymous wrote:hi there, troll.
Anonymous wrote: Recently, my young daughters have declared more than once, "When I grow up, I'm not going to work, I'm gonna get married and stay home with my children!" Yikes.
Anonymous wrote:I totally get what you're saying. While it is one CHOICE they can make, saying "I'm never going to work" is not okay. I would stress to them that staying at home IS work and that there are lots of other ways to work too. You treating it as a job will help them to see that while it is a job, there are many others out there as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 2 DDs in elementary school and an infant son. I had a professional life before children, but after 2nd DD was born decided to SAH. Recently, my young daughters have declared more than once, "When I grow up, I'm not going to work, I'm gonna get married and stay home with my children!" Yikes. This makes me cringe, even though its the choice I have made for now. They are young, but I've talked with them about college, about the importance of self reliance, about my life before my SAHM stint and the possibility of my going back someday. They reply with a sort of - "ok, I'll go to school, get a job, but only until I have kids, then I'm staying home."
I don't regret where I am, but I didn't go through life, school, college, graduate school, career with the mindset that it was just until I found a husband and had some kids! Any other SAHMs think about what kind of role models we are for our girls because we are not working outside of the home?
Your impulse is correct because you have basically stuck a thumb in the eye of the feminists of the 60s and made their work for financial equality for women in vain.
Feminism wasn't about getting more choices for women. It was about economic empowerment.
And, yes, your actions speak more loudly than any words. This is what they'll remember: You, at home. With them. They value that, why don't you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What's a reasonable, intelligent, and kind person like you doing here?
You're so kind, but I'm not that nice because now I want to punch the "end their intellectual lives when their children are born" poster in the face.
Twelve hours a day of tax law or media buying or even wonkery is no match for time to pursue any subject I like, go anywhere I want and cultivate interesting people.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 DDs in elementary school and an infant son. I had a professional life before children, but after 2nd DD was born decided to SAH. Recently, my young daughters have declared more than once, "When I grow up, I'm not going to work, I'm gonna get married and stay home with my children!" Yikes. This makes me cringe, even though its the choice I have made for now. They are young, but I've talked with them about college, about the importance of self reliance, about my life before my SAHM stint and the possibility of my going back someday. They reply with a sort of - "ok, I'll go to school, get a job, but only until I have kids, then I'm staying home."
I don't regret where I am, but I didn't go through life, school, college, graduate school, career with the mindset that it was just until I found a husband and had some kids! Any other SAHMs think about what kind of role models we are for our girls because we are not working outside of the home?
Anonymous wrote:
What's a reasonable, intelligent, and kind person like you doing here?
Anonymous wrote:You really, really don't need to worry about this. It's so common to hear this at this age.
What this means is, we love you and we like our home life, and our baby brother is adorable. We're having a great childhood.
Nothing to do with what they will think in a couple of years, let alone heading off to college.
My mom was a SAH and I went through the typical pattern of thinking she was the best ever, thinking she was pathetic and I never wanted to be the least bit like her and then gradually coming to understand that she was, in fact, super awesome and did precisely what she most wanted to do in spite of sometimes open contempt from other women with small ideas about life choices.
I'm a SAH, my daughter has also talked about SAH (along with a bevy of other life plans), and here's what I do: try to have a lot of neat women with a wide variety of life choices in my circle, talk openly about our lives with our kids around, and speak admiringly of my friends' abilities and the ways they've solved problems to get what they want. She knows women who have followed the typical path of achievement and have high-powered jobs, and she knows women who were teen mothers and are going back to school in their 30s (and kicking ass). She knows artists with young babies who work during naps, women with SAH partners, SAHs who are respected community organizers, professional women who are part time for family or pleasure, women who combine flexible well-paid work with running a nonprofit or volunteering. She knows very intelligent women who have lived partially or fully on public assistance, and a few who have chosen poverty for various reasons. She has heard me congratulate these friends on every micro and macro achievement under the sun, and has seen us share support and heard my friends talk about my work experience, abilities and future work. She's also, incidentally, seen that my SAH friends are not all as financially secure as they could be, and that some of the less educated SAHM are working for much less money in part-time jobs than the ones who built careers first.
What she will never hear me do is push WOH to the extent that she might suspect I'm denigrating SAH. That, I think, could backfire.
I'm trying to give her access to many realities, and not just see and know this variety of women, but hear their choices articulated. This is the part that was missing for me growing up - there was very little discussion of how women's complicated lives actually *worked.* I didn't enter one profession because it was so male-dominated and I had no examples or mentors for how to make it work with a family, which was a non-negotiable goal. Since then, I've met many women in that profession who forged a different path.
I want her to have the sense that there are an infinite number of choices, and tradeoffs with every choice, but every choice can be made to work if it grows organically out of the woman's strengths and honest self-understanding.
Anonymous wrote:My favorite is the SAHMs that work so hard to send their daughters to fancy schools, worry about their intellectual development etc. Why, so they can end their intellectual lives when their kids are born?
Yes, it's a valid concern.