I made this point during a recent thread about SAHMs, and it got so ugly that it was closed before I could respond. My point was that being a SAHM wasn't all that hard. What I meant was that it was much easier for me to do the kinds of things SAHMs do, without the intense pressure of job requirements - no dressing up for work, so boss being critical, etc. etc. The woman who was most irritated said, "If it's not hard, you're not doing it right." WHAT????!!!!!dustysky said:Hmmm ...... I guess by reading here that I must be the only one who thinks its pretty darn easy to be SAHM.
I just went to work and would give anything to not HAVE to work in order to get by.
I loved being at home for all the years I did, I didn't HAVE to get up to an alarm clock, worry about being on time to punch the clock or the many other stresses that come along with working out of the home.
I loved cleaning my house and having dinner ready, being able to read a book to my kids, take them out when ever I wanted to and for how ever long I wanted.
So for me being a SAHM mom was not the hardest job in the world as so many say , being a GREAT mother and a full time employee, trying so hard to be everything to everyone,and fit it all into one day, everyday.....that's the hardest job I have had so far.![]()

That cracked me up. I went back and read her posts and her children were small - 6 and 7, and she had obviously set herself an agenda of the "perfect" way to be a mother. My way didn't fit her mold, so I did it "wrong" in her book. I'd have liked the opportunity to honestly discuss it with her, but too late for that thread.
In my view, there's a spectrum of moms. The hardest job is being a working mom of infant, toddler and preschool children, and the easiest job is being a stay at home mom to middle school and high school children, in terms of demands on your time and amount of flexibility/free time you get. Everyone figures out her own way to get the basics done - it's a matter of what else is pulling at you at the time that makes it easy or difficult.
Anyway, none of it really matters in the long run. My oldest child is now going away to college, and all of us who fought so bitterly when our kids were younger agree that we can't see much difference in how they all turned out!!