Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady you are living the dream. Enjoy every minute and be proud.
Woukd you say the same if the roles were reversed ?
Be honest
Anonymous wrote:OP -- I haven't read all the responses, but I totally get where you're coming from. His success is not your success. You shouldn't have stopped working, but now you have to live with that. Just remember this when you're giving young women/your daughter advice.
Anonymous wrote:Lady you are living the dream. Enjoy every minute and be proud.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- I haven't read all the responses, but I totally get where you're coming from. His success is not your success. You shouldn't have stopped working, but now you have to live with that. Just remember this when you're giving young women/your daughter advice.
Anonymous wrote:omg go away this is not a real problem. stop. you know it's not bc you made sure to brag extensively in your post. jfc. your real problem is not having any perspective on real issues and if you have time go and maybe volunteer somewhere and get some.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I met when we were in grad school. We were both ambitious and had demanding careers when we got married. We earned roughly the same when we had kids and over the years, I mommy tracked, moved to part time consulting and eventually became a SAHM of our three kids. DH’s career has soared and our kids are all thriving doing well in school, happy and social.
I recently didn’t go to my college reunion. It wasn’t a convenient time but more than anything, I think I’m embarrassed that I no longer work. DH is top of his field and earns a few million dollars per year. We live in a beautiful home in a highly desired area, have multiple vacation homes, etc. We live better and have more money than the majority of my old college friends. DH thinks I should be proud of my accomplishments because DH’s success is my success. I’m not sure how I feel about that.
Do you think your spouse and children’s success if your success?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I don't think his success is your success but it sounds like you chose to go the more traditional gender role route.
Personally I am not a fan of SAHP after the kids are in school because I do think both parents should be involved in a life other than raising children but I do get that some women like to be taken care of and just relax at home while their husband works. For those that aren't ambitious and just like luxuries and don't mind being child-like and dependent on others - this is the perfect life.
I would be embarrassed too to go to a reunion because a rich husband to me isn't my goal or what I see as success. To me that isn't the dream.
That’s the problem. I was ambitious. I was career oriented. I used to work 60+ hours per week when I had my first child. Those hours weren’t sustainable. I took a lateral less demanding less paying job when I had my second child but the job was not satisfying. It was just a job to have a job. I kept cutting down and stayed home when we had our third child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a man but I absolutely think of all of our success as joint. I'm not SAH, but I do most of the childcare, and that enables my wife to succeed in her job in ways she couldn't without me being there. We both supported each other financially during times of unemployment and schooling, and without that support neither one of us would be where we are today. We both support each other emotionally, and that support is crucial to whatever success, career or personal, we have.
"For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two but one flesh." We're a unit, we rise and fall as a unit, and there's nothing that's because of one of us but not the other.
I'm a woman and in my experience women are more "what's yours is mine and what's mine is mine". You might feel like her successes are yours (like OP's husband says) but is she as eager to attribute her success to you? That's not my experience when speaking with girl friends.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a man but I absolutely think of all of our success as joint. I'm not SAH, but I do most of the childcare, and that enables my wife to succeed in her job in ways she couldn't without me being there. We both supported each other financially during times of unemployment and schooling, and without that support neither one of us would be where we are today. We both support each other emotionally, and that support is crucial to whatever success, career or personal, we have.
"For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two but one flesh." We're a unit, we rise and fall as a unit, and there's nothing that's because of one of us but not the other.