Anonymous wrote:I don’t mind “mom” because it helps be identify women like me. Like I’m not gonna have anything in common with a single, childless 23 year old.
But “wife of ____” or “husband of _____” gives off major creepy Christian vibes. The only people I know who make “spouse” a huge part of their identity are super religious and usually have crappy marriages. Like you find out H hits his wife and W is having an affair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure they have husbands?
If these are young mothers I find a lot of them define themselves by their motherhood which is sad. Themselves as a person are not important who they are as a mother is the most important thing about their identity
Oh shut up. And get a life.
Not the PP to whom you're responding, but clearly you've never seen posts on this site by some self-proclaimed mama bears who do seem to define themselves as mothers first and foremost, all else be damned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but nothing about the husband?
It would be so tacky; this is not the 1950s. I have mom of 2 kids/scientist/native plant gardener in mine.
This is such a trash thing to say and is a product of toxic feminism. If valuing your life partner with whom you spend 60 years of your life is an anachronism from the 1950s, sign me up for the time machines when they are built.
This tells me you are of an older generation. We don't worship the man, put him on a pedestal anymore and identify as a wife of someone. I've been married for 15 years and spreading my legs 3-4 times/week, despite being very enjoyable, is not an accomplishment. Raising the future generation to be valuable members of the society, making the world a better functioning place, curing people and diseases, helping the economy and/or environment, creating jobs, innovating - all these are accomplishments. Wake up and do something valuable with the rest of your life, which does not include BJs and cooking lasagna on Fridays for your 65 year old sweetie. If you think lack of male adulation means toxic femininity, I feel sorry for you. We are no longer cattle-equivalent.
wow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure they have husbands?
If these are young mothers I find a lot of them define themselves by their motherhood which is sad. Themselves as a person are not important who they are as a mother is the most important thing about their identity
Oh shut up. And get a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but nothing about the husband?
It would be so tacky; this is not the 1950s. I have mom of 2 kids/scientist/native plant gardener in mine.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure they have husbands?
If these are young mothers I find a lot of them define themselves by their motherhood which is sad. Themselves as a person are not important who they are as a mother is the most important thing about their identity
Anonymous wrote:Because kids can be a great accessory and a shield. No one feels bad for attacking a professor, a writer, but doing the same to someone's mom would be terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because being a mother is a job, and being a wife/daughter/sister/friend is not.
Being a wife is a job, and most women deserve to be fired from it.
Anonymous wrote:My boss has "scientist, mother, runner, she/her" in her profile. She is also a wife but obviously finds that descriptive unbecoming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of it is about what you spend your time doing. Kids are time-consuming so if you want to describe activities that define your life, they are going to make the list.
I wouldn’t put anything in my Twitter bio but I think it would be weird for a parent to say something like “lawyer foodie knitter Gardner” and not add “mom” or “dad.”
Not that it’s a big deal one way or another.
A few years ago, I was nearly not hired into my present role when HR found out I had young kids. It didn’t come up in any interviews—I was on the East Coast, they phoned me at 8 pm my time from a random number and I made the mistake of picking up and there was kid background noise. HR called my future managers and warned them I had young kids.
My manager said “so does the other [male] applicant and you didn’t raise any concerns.”
So my public Internet presence doesn’t mention my kids and never has.