NMAmy
Can speak food in German
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2000
- Messages
- 15,229
We got into a discussion at work the other day that got me thinking. I work at a college and I received an assignment that an instructor needs to have copied. While I was waiting for something on the computer to load, I happened to glance over at it. It was instructions for interviewing people of different ages and under the heading of "Women 60 and older," she had written, "Do NOT ask women of this age about their work--ask them about their families instead. If they worked outside the home, they'll let you know."
I found this really odd. I'm 42 and my mom is in her 70's. Mom was divorced from her first husband and worked after the divorce to support herself and my sister. After she and my dad married, she continued to work until my younger sister was born. When my younger sister was in high school, Mom went back to work again. I sincerely think it would have been better for everyone if she'd continued to work outside the home even when my sister and I were little--she was very unhappy being a stay at home mom.
My grandmother also worked outside the home. My great-grandmother's first husband died quite young and she ran the entire farm by herself for years. My dad's mom was a French teacher and after she retired (when I was a kid), she worked at a local convenience store, and then at a senior center.
I guess the reason I thought it was so odd (not only because of my own experience) but because so many women worked in some capacity or other (cleaning houses, taking in laundry, etc.) during the Depression and worked in factories, etc. during WWII. When I brought this up to others at work (my own age and older), every one of us had mothers who worked--either running farms, secretarial, or cleaning houses, etc. I talked to DH about it and his family was the opposite--his mom stayed home (she never even learned to drive), as did his grandmother and aunts.
Please understand--I realize that being a SAHM is a huge amount of work and I'm not in any way saying that there is anything wrong with it or that it isn't valuable or ANYTHING like that. I don't want this to be that kind of thread.
I was just surprised that this teacher would automatically assume that older women had never worked outside the home. So, I'm widening my question now--did your mom work at any kind of job outside the home?
I found this really odd. I'm 42 and my mom is in her 70's. Mom was divorced from her first husband and worked after the divorce to support herself and my sister. After she and my dad married, she continued to work until my younger sister was born. When my younger sister was in high school, Mom went back to work again. I sincerely think it would have been better for everyone if she'd continued to work outside the home even when my sister and I were little--she was very unhappy being a stay at home mom.
My grandmother also worked outside the home. My great-grandmother's first husband died quite young and she ran the entire farm by herself for years. My dad's mom was a French teacher and after she retired (when I was a kid), she worked at a local convenience store, and then at a senior center.
I guess the reason I thought it was so odd (not only because of my own experience) but because so many women worked in some capacity or other (cleaning houses, taking in laundry, etc.) during the Depression and worked in factories, etc. during WWII. When I brought this up to others at work (my own age and older), every one of us had mothers who worked--either running farms, secretarial, or cleaning houses, etc. I talked to DH about it and his family was the opposite--his mom stayed home (she never even learned to drive), as did his grandmother and aunts.
Please understand--I realize that being a SAHM is a huge amount of work and I'm not in any way saying that there is anything wrong with it or that it isn't valuable or ANYTHING like that. I don't want this to be that kind of thread.
I was just surprised that this teacher would automatically assume that older women had never worked outside the home. So, I'm widening my question now--did your mom work at any kind of job outside the home?
She worked third shift at a nursing home up to the point when my sister and I were old enough to keep an eye on our little brother after school (I think I was 12 and my sister was 15) and then she moved to first shift at a different place, a center for mentally disabled, where she continues to work today. 

