bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
Sounds to me like a question based on the fact that she's a single parent, not that she's a SHE. I'm assuming that the men you work with have wives that care for the children when they are out of town working (or they are a part-time/weekend parent) and it is assumed the other parent will care for the child. Whereas, the OP has no SO at home to care for her child.
I tend to agree with this. They might just be curious, not accusatory.
Still, with that said I can see how being asked that all the time gets real old, real quick, especially when you know that your male counterparts aren't being asked the same question.
I'm sure it does get old, but it's also probably getting old for the men you work with (and/or their wives) to have it just *assumed* that the fort is being held down at home without anyone ever inquiring about that.
I know that your lot is a difficult one...my mom was very much in your shoes. I also know that it's not always peaches and cream being the at home parent, and since my husband travels for work I know that that's not the easiest thing, to be THE person 24/7... And if DH's employers took me for granted I'd flip my lid. They let him come home in between two trips so that we could all attend the summer company picnic (you can't get in without the employee). The CEO actually remembers my name and asked about me when DH saw him the second time, and has thanked me (through DH) for being supportive of hubby's job...and DH's managers have sent email messages that are similar. If they did not, if they took me for granted like his employers two companies ago, it would be very difficult for me.
So if your employers aren't doing things like that for the men you work with, know that it's very likely getting JUST as old for them as the curiousity is for you.
Just to make sure, I'm not comparing hardship here. Just saying it's all hard, in varying and different ways! Sadly my mom died when I was 30, before I met my husband, so I can't ask her how on earth she did it all...before she married her second husband, she worked TONS of jobs. We were latchkey kids, and I was in charge starting at 9 when the string of babysitters just failed repeatedly...it's all hard.