Anonymous wrote:No. No, you really don't. Is your child at home with you all day, playing around the house and making a giant mess? Are you cooking lunch and snacks and eating off of your dishes for all meals during the day? It's not the same if you are out of the house working FT. Your kid is either in a daycare/school situation somewhere else (hence making messes and dirtying dishes and bathrooms elsewhere) or at home with a nanny whose job it is to clean up after the child and take care of those messes. So, no, you are NOT doing the same errands and chores that a SAHP is. Sorry, you just aren't.
But here's the rub -- OP can't handle doing the absolute basics of being a SAHP without being utterly wiped. That's problematic. And I say this as a woman who was in the exact same position. I, quite frankly, sucked at being a SAHM. I admit it now (years later), but I just wasn't cut out for it. I could have written OP's post 5 years ago (and my husband is a saint like OP's for allowing me to muddle through a period when the house was a disaster, I was constantly frustrated, and he had to juggle more than his fair share).
I wish more people were honest about this. The thing that sucks about being a SAHP is that when it isn't a good fit, you are often stuck because of your own sense of duty (dammit I committed to this and I will see it through) or guilt or just plain difficulty of finding a job once you've been unemployed.
No. No, you really don't. Is your child at home with you all day, playing around the house and making a giant mess? Are you cooking lunch and snacks and eating off of your dishes for all meals during the day? It's not the same if you are out of the house working FT. Your kid is either in a daycare/school situation somewhere else (hence making messes and dirtying dishes and bathrooms elsewhere) or at home with a nanny whose job it is to clean up after the child and take care of those messes. So, no, you are NOT doing the same errands and chores that a SAHP is. Sorry, you just aren't.
Anonymous wrote:
Well, I do all that stuff on the weekend. On the same days that I have to do laundry, clean the house, run errands, etc. She has two hours a day during which she could do at least some of these things (not to mention that it is totally possible to do laundry, pick up toys, etc. with an awake toddler), but she claims that she can't. I repeat: if taking your kid to a gym class exhausts you such that you are unable to accomplish anything for the rest of the day, you are probably not cut out to stay at home.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, I just don't understand how the OP is the problem. I don't even get the sense that she's complaining! Her DH wants more time to himself, and he's right to want that, but she can want that, too. It's not like watching a child all day is giving her "time to herself."
I'm a SAHP but also used to work PT. It was tough, and I feel for WOHPs. But this attitude of hating on SAHPs is unfair. I remember being stressed a lot when I was at work, but I also could take a 5-minute break. I could go to the bathroom without someone screaming into the bathroom for me to come help with something. I could go get a cup of coffee without worrying that something terrible was going to happen at my workstation while I got up to go get it. I could chat with other adults for a moment in between working on projects. It was stressful, but there were built-in break times -- things we need to recharge.
When you SAH, you don't ever have those break times. No matter how well-behaved your kids are, they simple want as much as you can give all the time. Maybe they nap -- or maybe they don't -- and then perhaps you have a short break. Well, I wouldn't ask you to use your 15-minute coffee break to scrub the bathroom at work or vacuum around your desk, and it's not fair to assume a SAHP has the energy to run off and do these things the minute she/he finally gets a break.
Also, doing errands is important, but maybe the OP really wants to spend time with her kid -- doing things that are helping him/her develop and grow, not just running around town going to the post office and grocery store. I personally think these things are valuable lessons, but I also understand the hesitation to do them all the time, particularly if I'd like for a moment to peacefully think about what I want to make for dinners this week instead of just frantically throw things in the cart before a meltdown occurs.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, I just don't understand how the OP is the problem. I don't even get the sense that she's complaining! Her DH wants more time to himself, and he's right to want that, but she can want that, too. It's not like watching a child all day is giving her "time to herself."
I'm a SAHP but also used to work PT. It was tough, and I feel for WOHPs. But this attitude of hating on SAHPs is unfair. I remember being stressed a lot when I was at work, but I also could take a 5-minute break. I could go to the bathroom without someone screaming into the bathroom for me to come help with something. I could go get a cup of coffee without worrying that something terrible was going to happen at my workstation while I got up to go get it. I could chat with other adults for a moment in between working on projects. It was stressful, but there were built-in break times -- things we need to recharge.
When you SAH, you don't ever have those break times. No matter how well-behaved your kids are, they simple want as much as you can give all the time. Maybe they nap -- or maybe they don't -- and then perhaps you have a short break. Well, I wouldn't ask you to use your 15-minute coffee break to scrub the bathroom at work or vacuum around your desk, and it's not fair to assume a SAHP has the energy to run off and do these things the minute she/he finally gets a break.
Also, doing errands is important, but maybe the OP really wants to spend time with her kid -- doing things that are helping him/her develop and grow, not just running around town going to the post office and grocery store. I personally think these things are valuable lessons, but I also understand the hesitation to do them all the time, particularly if I'd like for a moment to peacefully think about what I want to make for dinners this week instead of just frantically throw things in the cart before a meltdown occurs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why it's so hard to do errands with toddler. Our DD is now 22 months, but I've been taking her on errands since she was 3 months old, every afternoon. The people at the bank, post office, and Giant know her pretty well by now. Today we went to CVS to get some stuff while walking around and looking at things, then off to Giant where she helped pick what to make for dinner (pizza.. but scratch-made except the crust). If she's going to be fussy, we go to the salad bar and I let her munch on a cucumber slice while we shop.
To be fair, some toddlers are easier to run errands with then others. I have had four and one at that age was a total PITA, loathed strollers and shopping carts, wanted to walk, etc. But OP has a lot of time to run errands solo. I think they have a very odd family dynamic. No one seems to want to be with each other.
OP here. Why do you think our family dynamic is odd? I don't get that. The issue is that with husband working 2 weekends per month (traveling for work), we only have 2 weekends for "family time." In the warmer months there are more things we enjoy doing together--parks, festivals, fairs, day trips, etc. but in the winter months I really can't think of anything that we could do that would be "family time." My husband likes to have father-son time alone with our son since he barely sees him during the week, so they go to different activities together on the weekends in the morning. I don't really see what the point is of me tagging along to these since I do them all week long, you know--playgroup, gym class, etc. We don't have any local family to visit, which could be a good family time activity. We used to take our son out to restaurants until the last few months, when that became a lot more difficult and unpleasant, so we don't go out to restaurants as a family anymore. So I guess I don't really have any ideas on what could be family time with a toddler in the winter months. Toddler is 14 months.
Seriously OP?!? Read books as a family. Play. Talk. Sing songs. Go for a walk (just bundle up it isn't that cold). Play music. I think you need to think long and hard about what constitutes a family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is my read. If I stayed at home, you can bet your last dollar I'd be running all the errands I could during the week, except maybe grocery shopping. A two-hour nap is plenty of time to do one cleaning chore a day and have some downtime. I work full-time and have to do all the same household chores and errands as the OP. If taking your kid to a gym class exhausts you so much that you can't get anything accomplished during a two-hour nap, then this may not be the lifestyle for you. Or hire help--get a housecleaner. Be more flexible in a babysitter's hours--you don't need to be anywhere at a specific time, you just need someone to cover a few hours a few times a week so you can get stuff done.
No. No, you really don't. Is your child at home with you all day, playing around the house and making a giant mess? Are you cooking lunch and snacks and eating off of your dishes for all meals during the day? It's not the same if you are out of the house working FT. Your kid is either in a daycare/school situation somewhere else (hence making messes and dirtying dishes and bathrooms elsewhere) or at home with a nanny whose job it is to clean up after the child and take care of those messes. So, no, you are NOT doing the same errands and chores that a SAHP is. Sorry, you just aren't.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why some PPs are saying OP should run errands during the day. She runs errands after the kid is asleep so her DH is getting some alone time while she's out. He said he wants more alone time, not less.
Anonymous wrote:
This is my read. If I stayed at home, you can bet your last dollar I'd be running all the errands I could during the week, except maybe grocery shopping. A two-hour nap is plenty of time to do one cleaning chore a day and have some downtime. I work full-time and have to do all the same household chores and errands as the OP. If taking your kid to a gym class exhausts you so much that you can't get anything accomplished during a two-hour nap, then this may not be the lifestyle for you. Or hire help--get a housecleaner. Be more flexible in a babysitter's hours--you don't need to be anywhere at a specific time, you just need someone to cover a few hours a few times a week so you can get stuff done.
If I were your husband, I'd be thinking that my wife isn't contributing anything, bitches and nags to me despite my insane work schedule and decent amount of contributions around the house, and on top of that, we don't even spend time together or enjoy each other - so what's the point of this marriage.