bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,748
I am not trying to attack you, but it is inflammatory language like this that does nothing to more the discussion forward. ....
I think it is so important to respect each other.....
It would be so nice if we could support one another instead of tearing each other down. I have learned though in my 3 short years of being home that most of the mud slinging...
But in telling the PP that she is using inflammatory language and that she shouldn't be saying that, are you actually supporting HER? Those are her feelings. She's not mudslinging while saying what she feels. She isn't ALSO saying "and those who do otherwise are evil", right? I think that sometimes people "hear" those extra words that haven't been said/typed/thought and go from there.
My mom was a working mom, she had NO choice. And every single day I cried and asked her to stay home, and every school day I was insanely nervous and had a stomachache and felt nauseated and wanted to stay home. (what a joy, right?) (though this past year I've started to figure out some of that, why I felt so nauseated and pained in the mornings, kind of interesting to me.) I missed my mom. I was jealous of the friends whose mom could and did stay home. I spent a LOT of time over at their places. With that background, how could I NOT want to be home with DS? I would rather have my kid annoyed at me b/c I'm always there (like my friends with at home moms were) rather than have my kid sad that he didn't get to see me except a couple hours between bed and school and work and bed (my mom worked weekends quite often so those days were often out, too), which is *how it was in my home* apart from the wonderful halcyon time that she worked at a bookstore that was a 20 minute bike ride from home and we could sit and hang with her and carefully read books all day long over the summer.
The OP works for a living also, she works from home. She is a day care provider, house cleaner, laundress, cook/chef, etc. Unfortunately, she doesn't collect a paycheck for it.
DH keeps trying to give me checks, but I'd rather stick with the informal part of it all, LOL. When I started cutting his and DS's hair (b/c people messed up DS's hair, and while DH's cuts were good, he always had to go back once or twice to have them fix it before they were perfect and it just got old) he literally wrote out checks to me in the amount he would have paid the hairdressers.

This is me as well. Yes, I could get a part time job, but when I am the one who has to stay home when the kids are sick or leave work to pick them up early, that will put my employer in a bad spot. Every employer deserves employees who can put 100% into their job and I can't do that. If my DH didn't make enough money and I had to work, that would be a different story. But since I don't need to work outside of the home, I think those people who do would make better employees than me. And why waste my time (or theirs) if I can't put 100% into it?
Yep. I can't even imagine trying to juggle things! I am just not up to it. Maybe if my mom were still alive and I could ask her how on earth she did it, maybe it would be different. But I haven't a clue how DS could be fully taken care of in all contingencies so as to allow one of us parents to give FULL attention to a job. Especially now that hubby is traveling. I'm glad that I can take care of DS so that hubby can focus on work...and if that means I do the dishes when normally that's his job (I usually cook, he usually washes dishes), so be it...
I honestly dont understand the SAHM concept-when your kids are in school
I was a SAHM-but worked out of an office in my home. When the kids went to school-I went to the office a couple days a week. But I always worked.
I cant imagine being home-without kids-and doing nothing but housework all day.Isnt it boring?
I did it before we were married (as I had mentioned) and it wasn't boring. I was planning a wedding, of course, and it was a wedding FOR DH. I wanted Vegas, he didn't, and he won that "argument" (until whenever our renewal happens) but I got to plan it, so it was extremely difficult for me. Since we homeschool DS isn't going anywhere any time soon, but if he were to insist on going to school I doubt I'd get a job.
I found JOBS to be boring. Most co-workers were just ridiculous and far more childish than DS was when he was 1. I'd much rather hang out at home, continue my organizing and scrapbooks and photography projects and think thoughts to myself, rather than hear the sort of things DH tells me he hears at work while socializing with adults!

But I'm sure that not all co-workers are like that. Since a couple of my friends are actually from my last longterm job I know it. But our friendships were formed *outside* of work. Anyway, I'm sure some jobs are fulfilling (like hubby's, which I'm not qualified for), I just haven't found one that's both profitable AND fulfilling to me.
I gotta clean my floor now. Previous tenants did a short-cut with the wood floors, used Murphy's Oil Soap on them, and they have a scum now. For months now when we think of it we take a Dobie pad in vinegar and water, and scrub the scum off. The parts we've cleaned are quite beautiful, and hopefully someday all the scum will be off and we can ONLY clean it with vinegar and water!
This thread has inspired me to continue that work, which I hate (it hurts, wah wah wah, to kneel on the floor like Cinderella), b/c I'm here. And since an at home parent with a traveling spouse doesn't get weekends off from their normal duties...I might as well!

"A 60 y/o lady who is still at home, playing tennis with a hubby that is a school coach. It doesnt seem like a SAHM issue. It seems like a very poor decision maker issue."
I agree. Unless she was playing tennis at the Y or a community court or something. Which is possible.

Isnt it boring?
My DH does not make six figures, and I can't play tennis. I do have a college education and I have worked in the past. I'm never home - running errands and volunteering at the school. And I don't have a housekeeper.





), but she always gives her credit for raising her daughter correctly.