Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Future plans?
Educational concerns of children?
Socialization planning?
Stop making crap up to sound like a martyr.
Are you being sarcastic?
Planning for the future, educating children, and making plans with friends/family are all real things.
NP. When both parents work, these things take up probably two hours in a year. Otherwise it’s just called being a parent.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious to hear from other SAHM whether or not they do everything at home and with the kids and house because they stay at home. I'm talking finances/bills/planning/vacations/future plans/housework (with kids chipping in for chores on a regular basis)/shopping/cooking/clean up/laundry/educational concerns of children/medical concerns and responsibilities for children/home and property maintenance/hiring people to do outside work when necessary/socialization planning, etc.
Is it reasonable to expect the other parent to do anything when they are home, or should they just be able to relax and have no responsibilities when home?
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious to hear from other SAHM whether or not they do everything at home and with the kids and house because they stay at home. I'm talking finances/bills/planning/vacations/future plans/housework (with kids chipping in for chores on a regular basis)/shopping/cooking/clean up/laundry/educational concerns of children/medical concerns and responsibilities for children/home and property maintenance/hiring people to do outside work when necessary/socialization planning, etc.
Is it reasonable to expect the other parent to do anything when they are home, or should they just be able to relax and have no responsibilities when home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a SAHM means you’re going to be doing the bulk of childcare, cleaning and cooking. The exception is if you’re wealthy and can outsource all of this. I mean insanely wealthy with live in staff. Weekly cleaners still mean there is cleaning work for the SAHM like cleaning after meals and kids playing.
Most women aren’t interested in being a man’s maid, cook and nanny so they go to work. It’s a better arrangement. You get paid money too.
If you’re a SAHM and you expect your husband to pitch in at home a lot well then you’re not doing your job. He will think you’re a joke. You don’t work and you STILL can’t manage everything at home??
You need to meet better men.
C’mon. What are you even doing if you stay at home and don’t handle most stuff at home? A woman stays home to spend more time with kids, not pay for childcare, not burden the higher earning spouse with chores, etc. It is terrible to admit but a woman stays home to benefit everyone else.
You’re insane if you think your husband should be the sole breadwinner and then come home and split chores with you.
I stay home to provide care for my children, not to make my husband's life easier. Do I do more domestic labor because I'm at home more? Yes. There is more to do because we are here during the day and it has to be done to meet my children's needs on a daily basis. Does that absolve my husband from domestic labor when he is home? Why on Earth would it?
He is part of the family so he does his share, just like I expect of my kids as they get older. Is it strictly equal across the board? Of course not. But it is not my "job" to keep house for him or relieve him of all domestic or parenting responsibilities. That is antiquated thinking and I am thankful that there are not men in my life who indulge in it.
+100
And women whose husbands think a SAHM should do nearly everything are typically those who reasonably conclude they shouldn’t SAH. Most of the partnerships I know with a SAHM are the most progressive and egalitarian, because otherwise, why would a 21st century woman make that choice?
+1
Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends. I only SAH for one year--I had a 2 year old and infant that year. My DH did a lot more of the "chores" than I did. If I were a SAH parent with kids in school all day, I think I would do the vast majority of stuff you mentioned, though I would think DH would still be involved in the big stuff like arranging contractors, medical issues, etc. And I'd still have a weekly cleaning lady.
I was going to say the same thing. The answer to this has depended on the ages of my kids. DH helped out a lot more when I was spending my entire day with young children who needed me constantly. Now that the kids are in school, I'm able to get so much more done than I used to. SAHM experiences differ so much - on additional outside help (some have nannies, housekeepers, twice-a-month cleaners, half day preschool etc), how many kids, what ages and it changes over time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We put in about equal numbers of work hours. He does about 45 hours a week of employed work and I put in the same hours at home. Even with 3 young kids I can get pretty much everything done that needs to be done in those 45 hours. That is a lot of time to do housework, errands, shopping, planning, organizing and all other house management related things. By using my time productively there really isn't much left to do on weekends or evenings. I try and get as much of the house and car maintenance done as possible but sometimes I leave things for him because I don't know how to do them.
During evenings and weekends we both do things that can't be done during the regular workweek - like dinner dishes, bedtime routines, weekend events etc.
We both expect the other to put in a full work week from Monday to Friday - getting done as much as possible. outside of that we share it. Sometimes because a kid has been sick or something else going on, I can't get all my work done that week and then we both pick up my slack on evenings or weekends, just like his colleagues would do for him if he couldn't get everything done for whatever reason.
We both take time for ourselves when we need it. He works out in the basement in the mornings before the kids are even up and i do lots of walking with them during the day so we don't really have designated me time for the gym. It is usually more about seeing a friend or doing something else.
Well, that’s impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Depends. I only SAH for one year--I had a 2 year old and infant that year. My DH did a lot more of the "chores" than I did. If I were a SAH parent with kids in school all day, I think I would do the vast majority of stuff you mentioned, though I would think DH would still be involved in the big stuff like arranging contractors, medical issues, etc. And I'd still have a weekly cleaning lady.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a SAHM means you’re going to be doing the bulk of childcare, cleaning and cooking. The exception is if you’re wealthy and can outsource all of this. I mean insanely wealthy with live in staff. Weekly cleaners still mean there is cleaning work for the SAHM like cleaning after meals and kids playing.
Most women aren’t interested in being a man’s maid, cook and nanny so they go to work. It’s a better arrangement. You get paid money too.
If you’re a SAHM and you expect your husband to pitch in at home a lot well then you’re not doing your job. He will think you’re a joke. You don’t work and you STILL can’t manage everything at home??
You need to meet better men.
C’mon. What are you even doing if you stay at home and don’t handle most stuff at home? A woman stays home to spend more time with kids, not pay for childcare, not burden the higher earning spouse with chores, etc. It is terrible to admit but a woman stays home to benefit everyone else.
You’re insane if you think your husband should be the sole breadwinner and then come home and split chores with you.
I stay home to provide care for my children, not to make my husband's life easier. Do I do more domestic labor because I'm at home more? Yes. There is more to do because we are here during the day and it has to be done to meet my children's needs on a daily basis. Does that absolve my husband from domestic labor when he is home? Why on Earth would it?
He is part of the family so he does his share, just like I expect of my kids as they get older. Is it strictly equal across the board? Of course not. But it is not my "job" to keep house for him or relieve him of all domestic or parenting responsibilities. That is antiquated thinking and I am thankful that there are not men in my life who indulge in it.
+100
And women whose husbands think a SAHM should do nearly everything are typically those who reasonably conclude they shouldn’t SAH. Most of the partnerships I know with a SAHM are the most progressive and egalitarian, because otherwise, why would a 21st century woman make that choice?
Anonymous wrote:Depends. I only SAH for one year--I had a 2 year old and infant that year. My DH did a lot more of the "chores" than I did. If I were a SAH parent with kids in school all day, I think I would do the vast majority of stuff you mentioned, though I would think DH would still be involved in the big stuff like arranging contractors, medical issues, etc. And I'd still have a weekly cleaning lady.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a SAHM means you’re going to be doing the bulk of childcare, cleaning and cooking. The exception is if you’re wealthy and can outsource all of this. I mean insanely wealthy with live in staff. Weekly cleaners still mean there is cleaning work for the SAHM like cleaning after meals and kids playing.
Most women aren’t interested in being a man’s maid, cook and nanny so they go to work. It’s a better arrangement. You get paid money too.
If you’re a SAHM and you expect your husband to pitch in at home a lot well then you’re not doing your job. He will think you’re a joke. You don’t work and you STILL can’t manage everything at home??
You need to meet better men.
C’mon. What are you even doing if you stay at home and don’t handle most stuff at home? A woman stays home to spend more time with kids, not pay for childcare, not burden the higher earning spouse with chores, etc. It is terrible to admit but a woman stays home to benefit everyone else.
You’re insane if you think your husband should be the sole breadwinner and then come home and split chores with you.
I stay home to provide care for my children, not to make my husband's life easier. Do I do more domestic labor because I'm at home more? Yes. There is more to do because we are here during the day and it has to be done to meet my children's needs on a daily basis. Does that absolve my husband from domestic labor when he is home? Why on Earth would it?
He is part of the family so he does his share, just like I expect of my kids as they get older. Is it strictly equal across the board? Of course not. But it is not my "job" to keep house for him or relieve him of all domestic or parenting responsibilities. That is antiquated thinking and I am thankful that there are not men in my life who indulge in it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a SAHM means you’re going to be doing the bulk of childcare, cleaning and cooking. The exception is if you’re wealthy and can outsource all of this. I mean insanely wealthy with live in staff. Weekly cleaners still mean there is cleaning work for the SAHM like cleaning after meals and kids playing.
Most women aren’t interested in being a man’s maid, cook and nanny so they go to work. It’s a better arrangement. You get paid money too.
If you’re a SAHM and you expect your husband to pitch in at home a lot well then you’re not doing your job. He will think you’re a joke. You don’t work and you STILL can’t manage everything at home??
You need to meet better men.
C’mon. What are you even doing if you stay at home and don’t handle most stuff at home? A woman stays home to spend more time with kids, not pay for childcare, not burden the higher earning spouse with chores, etc. It is terrible to admit but a woman stays home to benefit everyone else.
You’re insane if you think your husband should be the sole breadwinner and then come home and split chores with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My expectation is that the SAHP manages the home. That includes pretty much everything, from child rearing, to cooking, to cleaning, to scheduling, to activities, and whatever else is required. If I am working to support the enterprise financially alone, I am going to focus on working and when I am home, I will focus on being present and enjoying my kids and spouse.
We did this for two years before he threw in the towel. He works full time, I have a weekly cleaner who does laundry, the kids are in school and SACC and I do more of the mental labor but it's fine and doesn't bother me.
When my DH offered to be home full time, I made my expectations clear. When it became to be too much, we reevaluated, he went back to work and we moved on.
Why doesn’t it bother you to do more of the mental labor if he is working? Does that mean that you work less at your job? Did you not make enough money to hire a weekly housekeeper without his financial help?
I have to say that of all of the childcare arrangements I have had (au pair, nanny, daycare, working PT, being a SAHM), working full time with a spouse at home full time was by far the best. I don’t understand why you wouldn’t give a little to keep this.
It doesn't bother me because my DH is making money. He's contributing to the cost of running our home, our retirement, our kids' college funds, etc.
I do work a good bit. But I have a very structured job, I travel minimally (4 times a year or so), and without the sole earner pressure, I have eased up on the night work after the kids go to bed. I work less, but do more at home.
When he went back to work, we hired a weekly housecleaner. They do our laundry as well.
My children go to SACC. I drop them off and they do activities at school before I pick them up. I manage camps, breaks (we do SACC), and it's not terribly difficult.
DH has a longer commute and that eats a good bit. He travels too. But honestly, I prefer the money to what we had before. He admittedly was not happy being home, he was mediorce at best and I put my foot down. We can pay for help, but I am not going to work, pay for help, and watch him putter around home. Nope, nope.
Ahh...gotcha. I loved that stuff. I liked having a project and working on it a ton, staying late when I needed to, going in to some of the early morning meetings, etc. But I found that I really only had time, energy, and flexibility for it when DH was doing all of the home stuff. I didn’t mind hiring a housekeeper to do the cleaning. Laundry, and cooking. And it really didn’t bother me what he was doing or not doing during the day. What I didn’t like is what you are doing now. Working all day, then coming home and doing that stuff at night, never really advancing in my career, and not really being a present parent either. It drove me crazy. But I can also see how it might feel like a good balance, particularly if you are using the money for something important to you.
PP here. What's interesting is that my career is pretty great. I am a General Counsel, I make excellent money, and I am able to achieve a work life balance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a SAHM means you’re going to be doing the bulk of childcare, cleaning and cooking. The exception is if you’re wealthy and can outsource all of this. I mean insanely wealthy with live in staff. Weekly cleaners still mean there is cleaning work for the SAHM like cleaning after meals and kids playing.
Most women aren’t interested in being a man’s maid, cook and nanny so they go to work. It’s a better arrangement. You get paid money too.
If you’re a SAHM and you expect your husband to pitch in at home a lot well then you’re not doing your job. He will think you’re a joke. You don’t work and you STILL can’t manage everything at home??
You need to meet better men.
C’mon. What are you even doing if you stay at home and don’t handle most stuff at home? A woman stays home to spend more time with kids, not pay for childcare, not burden the higher earning spouse with chores, etc. It is terrible to admit but a woman stays home to benefit everyone else.
You’re insane if you think your husband should be the sole breadwinner and then come home and split chores with you.
Huh? That is exactly what we do in our family. I only stayed home to be with my kids. Chores are unrelated to job/school status in our family. Everyone helps.