Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate these threads. I guess it depends on your social circle. No one in mine (mostly two working parents) would find this notable at all
Same. Most of the Dads in my neighborhood/circle are perfectly capable of caring for babies and kids solo (millennial Dads).
Exactly. This is called a stereotype and stereotypes are ignorant.
It's not a stereotype to say that many people in our communities congratulate men for parenting their children. That is a real thing that happens.
+1 Even if your peer group doesn't do this, you will encounter it in the wider community, including older people and teachers. Do my closest friends fawn all over my husband for basic parenting, no. That doesn't mean my mom and MIL, the teachers and principal at our school, people at the park and playground, waiters and waitresses, flight attendants, etc. don't do it. Or that all these people don't offer my husband help and benefit of the doubt when he's parenting around them, while giving moms nothing but judgment and unsolicited advice.
I'm a primary parent father and I've never encountered this. I trust that it DOES happen sometimes, because people talk about it, but it's not universal. The only congratulations I've gotten for parenting was for volunteering and was the same congratulations all the volunteers got. I got A LOT of judgment and unsolicited advice from women when I had younger kids too.
Thanks for sharing your experience. But your experience as one man does not invalidate the experience of numerous women. It doesn't even invalidate the experience of one woman. You can insist you have never been congratulated for parenting your own children until your face turns blue. That doesn't make OP's anecdote or that of numerous other posters false.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate these threads. I guess it depends on your social circle. No one in mine (mostly two working parents) would find this notable at all
Same. Most of the Dads in my neighborhood/circle are perfectly capable of caring for babies and kids solo (millennial Dads).
Exactly. This is called a stereotype and stereotypes are ignorant.
It's not a stereotype to say that many people in our communities congratulate men for parenting their children. That is a real thing that happens.
+1 Even if your peer group doesn't do this, you will encounter it in the wider community, including older people and teachers. Do my closest friends fawn all over my husband for basic parenting, no. That doesn't mean my mom and MIL, the teachers and principal at our school, people at the park and playground, waiters and waitresses, flight attendants, etc. don't do it. Or that all these people don't offer my husband help and benefit of the doubt when he's parenting around them, while giving moms nothing but judgment and unsolicited advice.
I'm a primary parent father and I've never encountered this. I trust that it DOES happen sometimes, because people talk about it, but it's not universal. The only congratulations I've gotten for parenting was for volunteering and was the same congratulations all the volunteers got. I got A LOT of judgment and unsolicited advice from women when I had younger kids too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate these threads. I guess it depends on your social circle. No one in mine (mostly two working parents) would find this notable at all
Same. Most of the Dads in my neighborhood/circle are perfectly capable of caring for babies and kids solo (millennial Dads).
Exactly. This is called a stereotype and stereotypes are ignorant.
It's not a stereotype to say that many people in our communities congratulate men for parenting their children. That is a real thing that happens.
+1 Even if your peer group doesn't do this, you will encounter it in the wider community, including older people and teachers. Do my closest friends fawn all over my husband for basic parenting, no. That doesn't mean my mom and MIL, the teachers and principal at our school, people at the park and playground, waiters and waitresses, flight attendants, etc. don't do it. Or that all these people don't offer my husband help and benefit of the doubt when he's parenting around them, while giving moms nothing but judgment and unsolicited advice.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s that boomers didn’t make their husbands do anything. My mom went on and on about how my dad never changed a diaper. When I had my kids, he quietly learned how to change a diaper and changed my kids if they were wet when he was playing with them (often. He saw them daily). He told me my mom criticized everything he did and didn’t let him.
Millennial men step up. They still might be lacking on emotional labor things like planning holidays or even cleaning a home. But I see mostly men at daycare pickup and drop offs. I was at an elementary school field trip today and it was half dads as chaperones. Men are at the playground en masse on the weekends with their kids.
My dh rarely makes bottles. I EBF at home and on weekends, but pump for daycare. I make all the bottles because I have a way of mixing the milk and I made it all so I remember which bottle was morning milk, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate these threads. I guess it depends on your social circle. No one in mine (mostly two working parents) would find this notable at all
Same. Most of the Dads in my neighborhood/circle are perfectly capable of caring for babies and kids solo (millennial Dads).
Exactly. This is called a stereotype and stereotypes are ignorant.
Would you say “most” Of the moms in your circle are perfectly capable of caring for babies and kids solo? Of course not because we all know without doubt all the moms are capable. The fact that even you say only most of the dads should give you pause. I can’t believe you are seriously refuting that there is still an enormous imbalance between the sexes here. Pretending it doesn’t exist does not help anyone.
Anonymous wrote:There are lower standards in every aspect for men - professionally, personally, etc.
women are expected to do more, simply because we can.