Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this thread a joke? Why would a man want to come home to a home cooked meal, a peaceful house, a relaxed spouse and all the bills, chores and other household things taken care of?
What person, man or woman, wouldn't want that?
SAHM are too frazzled to do all of that and take care of their kids.
I can pay the bills at lunch, we have flexible schedules so we cook most nights, the house is nice an clean since nobody was trashing it all day.
Anonymous wrote:My DH valued having a SAHM for our kids. Thankfully, we talked about it before we got married and were in agreement.
He has never had to worry about getting a call about a sick kid. Last minute travel is never a problem. He doesn't have to juggle his schedule to fit in doctors or dental appointments. Snow days are not stressful here- they are cause for celebration! Our house is always clean. Dinner is almost always homemade and ready when he walks in. I had everything done and the kids bathed and in pajamas so that we could eat dinner as family and relax in the evenings. We've never had to scramble to make last minute child care decisions. I've never sent a child to daycare or school sick. Family vacations are easy because we only need to work around his schedule.
All those things make life easier for all of us - my DH, me, and our kids. But above everything else, we were willing to do absolutely anything to avoid daycare or a nanny. We both felt very strongly about this and would have sold our home and everything in it and moved to a lower COL area before resorting to daycare.
We all have different values. Leaving our children in the care of someone other than a parent for 40+ hours a week in those first few years was not something either of us was comfortable with. No amount of extra income would have been worth it.
I went back to work when our kids were older. I am so glad I was home in those earlier years. We've been married close to 30 years. It's amazing what that kind of perpective does. Money was tight in those early years, but I wouldn't change a thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? I'm a WOHM, and I want one.
Anyone want to come join our marriage? Two physician couple, four adorable kids. We need someone to do all of the cooking, meal planning, laundry, cleaning, and money management, be active in the school community and with the teachers, decorate the house and celebrate holidays, purchase all Christmas presents, plan vacations and parties, sign the older kids up for activities and drive them there and back, each the little ones during the day and play age appropriate activities, do minor repairs, and hire out and manage all yardwork.
Two physician couple? There are a number of local household staffing agencies who would love to find you someone to do all this ...
But you have to pay that person. Many people are very resistant to paying someone to do "little" things, even when they add up to big things in the aggregate.
Unfortunately, there's also too much a tendency for the person who's very resistant to paying being a husband who says he would never want a wife who was a SAHM but also expects his working wife to do all of these things. I'm not saying that's the case for pp's marriage, but read DCUM for a few days (or look anywhere else in the real world) and you'll see a strong trend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? I'm a WOHM, and I want one.
Anyone want to come join our marriage? Two physician couple, four adorable kids. We need someone to do all of the cooking, meal planning, laundry, cleaning, and money management, be active in the school community and with the teachers, decorate the house and celebrate holidays, purchase all Christmas presents, plan vacations and parties, sign the older kids up for activities and drive them there and back, each the little ones during the day and play age appropriate activities, do minor repairs, and hire out and manage all yardwork.
Two physician couple? There are a number of local household staffing agencies who would love to find you someone to do all this ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a man, I find this to be a sad glimpse into the typical mommy wars.
The key to life is to block out what other's think you should do and do what works for you and your family.
I agree with you 100% (and I'm a woman, BTW). What works for my family may not work for your family and vice versa. Who the hell cares? I don't understand the constant interest in whether parents WOH or SAH. Are people really that insecure about their life choices?
Anonymous wrote:As a man, I find this to be a sad glimpse into the typical mommy wars.
The key to life is to block out what other's think you should do and do what works for you and your family.
Anonymous wrote:This was mentioned in the thread below that plenty of men still want a SAHM wife even though times have changed ostensibly. People say the right PC things about feminism but don't seem to really mean it when it comes to their own family life.
Guys, what's up with that?
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? I'm a WOHM, and I want one.
Anyone want to come join our marriage? Two physician couple, four adorable kids. We need someone to do all of the cooking, meal planning, laundry, cleaning, and money management, be active in the school community and with the teachers, decorate the house and celebrate holidays, purchase all Christmas presents, plan vacations and parties, sign the older kids up for activities and drive them there and back, each the little ones during the day and play age appropriate activities, do minor repairs, and hire out and manage all yardwork.
Anonymous wrote:Do people really get the impression that lots of men want SAH wives? Or working wives? I think often it's a combination of circumstances and the wife's wishes.
Yes, there are people who say "My husband would NEVER want to be married to someone who doesn't work" or "My husband LOVES that I stay at home" but I always wonder what those people are boasting about, since life changes so much and the whole point of marriage is to stick together through thick and thin. Just because someone works doesn't mean they're ambitious, and just because someone stays at home doesn't mean they're doing your laundry and cooking...
Ideally, I want a spouse who is happy and satisfied and has a full and rich life, and I don't want to have to worry about finances. I want my kids to be cared for and to feel secure and loved.
WOH, SAH...those labels are not predictors of any of the above. And many people, when they get married, have no true idea of what life is going to be like with children, where they're going to be in their careers, and what is going to work for their family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people actually think SS will still be around? That's silly.
It should be! I'm paying into it with every paycheck!
What I don't understand though is how spouses can get it even if they never worked. Neither of my grandmas ever worked but they both receive it (and not survivor benefits, I mean they get their own).