Anonymous wrote:I respect all choices, and I think it's crazy not to. I had a SAH father, and I respected him, too. He worked incredibly hard to raise me and my two siblings while my mom worked (and paved the way for all women in an industry dominated by men).
When you disrespect the work of a SAH parent, you are disrespecting the work YOU do as a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Are you asking if you can hire a cleaning lady/housekeeper? Of course you can if your finances permit. I'm a SAHM with young children and have a housekeeper 3x/week. She does the deep cleaning/tidying, laundry for the entire family and some food prep. I recommend it. Of course, with young children at home - especially the 2-4 set, even with a housekeeper I find myself constantly picking up, cooking and doing food prep -- but it is way less this way.
Anonymous wrote:Why do SAHMs need help figuring out how to do their job? It is the most straightforward gig ever, and made even easier if your husband makes a lot of money. You're on vacation! But like, for the rest of your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay, the people who are attacking you are RIDICULOUS. Please know that. You need to post this on a SAHM group. Go onto babycenter and find one of the SAHM boards (which I also follow, as a SAHM).
What you are proposing is fine. It's hard for you to picture because the baby isn't here. But what you're trying to say is that your priority is the baby, not doing housework, and that you are not a "housewife," or a maid, you are a parent. That is the same approach I took when I stayed home. And I needed DH to be on the same page so that we had the same expectations. He wanted me to spend my afternoon tickling my baby's toes, not making dinner. We lowered our expectations, and when he was home, we did housework 50/50 (sometimes it was 70/30 with his doing MORE because he recognizes how physically demanding my job is).
As baby got older I took on more of those responsibilities because I wanted to, and because it was enjoyable, and because it is easy to do so with a baby ONCE THEY ARE OLDER, but you will kill yourself if you try to do all that when they are an infant.
Please post this on a group for SAHMs. You will get a much better response.
Heaven forbid OP hear from folks (working parents) who have tips for how to balance way more than she would as a SAHM with one kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. I am a SAHM. We have a 2x weekly cleaning service. When my kids were little, we also had a babysitter 15-20 hours a week. We don't need that anymore now that they are school aged.
This is insane. What a spoiled princess you must be. What did you do with all your free time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. I am a SAHM. We have a 2x weekly cleaning service. When my kids were little, we also had a babysitter 15-20 hours a week. We don't need that anymore now that they are school aged.
This is insane. What a spoiled princess you must be. What did you do with all your free time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the question to us. Discuss it with your husband. Report back to us. This is not a group decision.
I did and he agrees 100% but I am not sure if either of us know what is involved. My job will be the care and teaching of our child. We can afford to outsource a bit more if needed.
Anonymous wrote:Sure. I am a SAHM. We have a 2x weekly cleaning service. When my kids were little, we also had a babysitter 15-20 hours a week. We don't need that anymore now that they are school aged.
Anonymous wrote:The way I see it, SAHM is your work from 7-6, M-F (or whenever your husband is gone). During that time, feel free to act like a nanny. From 6-7, and then on the weekends, you and your husband split tasks 50/50 or agree to outsource.
The flip side of this is your husband is a (profession) during work hours, but he doesn't get to come home and put his feet up while you make him a martini. When he is home and on weekends, he splits the housework with you, or you two agree to outsource.