Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a post every week disguised as a question but is clearly just a judgmental post about SAHMs? We get it. DCUM in general hates all forms of SAHP.
It works for some, would never work for others, and is looked down by many.
OP here. Not at all. I’m in my mid thirties and am at an inflection point in my personal and professional lives. I don’t look down on stay at home moms. I think it’s very valuable to have a parent at home. I’m just realizing it doesn’t come without sacrifice (sacrificing career, conventional achievement, etc.) and women can’t have it all. Being a working mom is tough, and staying at home has its own drawbacks.
Anonymous wrote:I love devoting all my energy to and spending as much time as possible with my kids so I love SAH. Being an older mother (had the kids in my late 30s) is one reason I view it this way. I also went to a top school and have an academic background.
Most people are not like me though. It sounds like you should be a stay a working mom or find a part time job in your field.
Anonymous wrote:I recently had my third child. I’ve been enjoying my time home while on maternity leave.
With three kids (6 and under), I feel like I am constantly busy. I was busy before, with 2 kids, but I am handling it better without the added stress of my job and like being available for my kids more - to the extent that I’m considering whether I should leave my job altogether at some point.
Leaving aside my financial hesitations about leaving the workforce, I have this nagging feeling about not doing something intellectually stimulating. I have a decent career in which I have mom tracked myself but I could dial it up. I am model mgmt at a prestigious company, went to a top university, and was always a strong student. I value having a parent being at home with the kids, and a less stressed one at that, but I feel this impending loss of identity not achieving.
I wouldn’t miss my job itself as much as having goals to work towards and feeling less aimless on a daily basis. Any sahms deal with that feeling?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of the reasons we homeschool. Our kids are doing far better academically than they would be doing at school, and they’re raised by a parent at home without parent going crazy from boredom. I gave up a big job for this, but so far it’s been worth it.
This would be my worst nightmare
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the reasons we homeschool. Our kids are doing far better academically than they would be doing at school, and they’re raised by a parent at home without parent going crazy from boredom. I gave up a big job for this, but so far it’s been worth it.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the reasons we homeschool. Our kids are doing far better academically than they would be doing at school, and they’re raised by a parent at home without parent going crazy from boredom. I gave up a big job for this, but so far it’s been worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Is there a post every week disguised as a question but is clearly just a judgmental post about SAHMs? We get it. DCUM in general hates all forms of SAHP.
It works for some, would never work for others, and is looked down by many.
Anonymous wrote:I quit being a SAHM because of this. It’s not just about reading books or having hobbies.
It’s more about building something and interacting with other adults to achieve something. With kids, once you get the basics down, it’s just the same thing day after day with no end in sight. With work, there’s an actual project with a completion date that requires creativity, trial and error, and it pushes me to my limits. Also helpful I’m surrounded by people who also geek out over the things I do and show a lot of appreciation (which, let’s be honest, kids and husbands don’t).
I know moms who are very happy being SAHMs and that’s great for them. But I can’t do it.