T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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603.1 | | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Myopically Enhanced Person | Mon Jun 17 1991 02:15 | 1 |
| Would I stay home? No way. I know where my skill set lies...
|
603.2 | interchangeable parts? | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Jun 17 1991 08:25 | 4 |
| with each of my four kids, I have to admit that I failed
miserably at breast feeding... I suppose I could have
stayed home and run the kid over to my wife's place of
work, each time s/he seemed hungry, though. ;-)
|
603.3 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Vague clouds of electrons tunneling through computer circuits and bouncing off of satelites. | Mon Jun 17 1991 09:34 | 10 |
| I'm unmarried, and have no children, so I speaking purely from dealing with
other people's kids.
I'm not sure that I would go for a full-time home-maker position, but if
possible I'd would be interested in a part-time position. In such a situation
each partner would work a partial week, and spend the remaining portion taking
care of the children. This would probably be even harder to negotiate with
the employer!
Rich
|
603.4 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1991 10:49 | 12 |
| I find the title of this topic rather puzzling. Just what is a "Father mom"?
Or, Jerry, do you believe that the task of caring for a child is necessarily
a mother's role, and that by a father staying home to care for his child, that
he is taking on someone else's role?
Digital does have "parental leave", which theoretically would allow a father
to take time off, unpaid, to care for his newborn child(ren), and have the
same guarantees when returning to his job as would a mother. Pragmatically,
I don't imagine this would be invoked often, as there would be strong
pressures against men who tried it.
Steve
|
603.6 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Jun 17 1991 11:38 | 3 |
| I think Steve understood that. I think Steve was making a point.
A good one, too.
- Vick
|
603.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1991 12:06 | 11 |
| Vick is correct.
Be that as it may, I know of one couple where they decided that the father
would stay home with the children and the mother would continue her career.
It seems to have worked out well for them so far. But I only know of one...
The whole issue may soon become moot, though, as the number of families which
has any sort of full-time caregiver parent, mother or father, is falling
rapidly. The two-career couple is now the norm.
Steve
|
603.8 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Mon Jun 17 1991 13:47 | 1 |
| How about if you re-title this to Mr. Mom or something like that.
|
603.9 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:09 | 12 |
| RE: .4-.6 I'm sure Steve had a point but I missed it. Sorry.
RE: .0 When my son was little and the person taking care of him while
my wife and I worked had to stop we discussed this. I wanted to stay
home and let my wife continue working. We were making about the same
money but I thought her prospects were better. I lost and my wife
stayed home. In hindsight she probably did a better job then I could
have at that time. I think I could do a better job now then I could
have then. I think I was also right about her work prospects too. I
was working for DEC. :-)
Alfred
|
603.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1991 15:20 | 7 |
| My point was that names like "Father Mom" and "Mr. Mom" are meaningless,
except in the context of our society's prejudices against men as capable
caregivers. "Mom" is "female parent". It makes no sense to say "Mr. Mom",
or at least, it ought not to make any sense. That it does to many is an
indication of our biases against men as parents.
Steve
|
603.12 | I still hope | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 184# now, 175# July | Mon Jun 17 1991 15:25 | 7 |
| This has always been our plan. My wife has already been a stay-at-home
mom, in her first marriage. In advance of our wedding, we agreed that I
would be the primary child-care provider. Since then we've worked to
make my not working (for a wage) feasible, by keeping our cost of
living low and saving money.
- Hoyt
|
603.13 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Electric Ecstasy | Mon Jun 17 1991 16:17 | 21 |
| >My point was that names like "Father Mom" and "Mr. Mom" are meaningless,
>except in the context of our society's prejudices against men as capable
>caregivers.
Malarkey. They are far from meaningless, except to the hypersensitive. The role
of mother is a very special one, and pretending it is not displays either
a lack of understanding that this is true or the presence of underlying
prejudice.
This is not to say that men cannot be capable caregivers; far from it! Mom
has been more or less synonymous for primary caregiver and nurturer since
time immemorial, and for good reason. Women have certainly been the primary
caregivers and nurturers in the vast majority of cases traditionally. There's
no reason to ignore or deny that out of a sense of despair stemming from
society's unwillingness to accept men on an equal footing with regards to child
rearing.
There is alot of meaning in a term like Father Mom or Mr. Mom when one chooses
to suppress one's personal biases.
The Doctah
|
603.14 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Jun 17 1991 17:48 | 108 |
| Seems to me that the argument below the level of "words" is
whether a man can give the same kind of nurturing that a
woman can give.
(My reply about breast feeding points out one item of
nurturing where men simply can't do it, but it's only one item,
so I am not about to throw out a man's nurturing ability
simply because he can't lactate. There are plenty of
other things that a baby/child/teen needs in the way of
nurturing besides human milk.)
So, the PC thing to say these days is that men and women can
do the nurturing equally well (with the exception of the
nurturing that goes on while the foetus is in the womb and
the breast feeding that goes on after birth).
Her is what I think Robert Bly would say. You can dump on it,
if you like. I won't take offense or defend it.
I think Bly would say that "nurturing is needed from both the
man and the woman for the baby/child/teen to grow up healthy,
but the man and woman give the child different things when
they are nurturing. In the most general sense, both the man
and the woman fill a need that the b/c/t has, but in addition,
they each supply the b/c/t with a sense that there is a caring
person of a specific gender who is filling this need." Bly talks
about "cellular" communication, as if the cells of the b/c/t
are getting the message, not just the "mind" of the b/c/t.
Think about it. The baby wakes in the middle of the night,
crying. A parent gets up, checks diaper, the time since last
feeding, general appearance/condition, the "tone" of the crying,
etc, and decides to simply hold the baby, rock it, hum a
lullabye, say some soothing words, until the baby calms down
and goes back to sleep. Does it matter which parent does this?
Does it matter if the same parent always does it?
The baby surely senses totally different things if that person
is male or female. First, male and female bodies don't smell
the same. They have different degrees and textures of hair
on arms, chests, necks, faces, heads, etc. Their voices are very
different, resonances occur in different places. (This baby
has its whole body lying along the upper body of the parent.)
The parent's body may be bare, or covered. If covered, the feel
of the night clothes is probably very different. If there is
a light on, the baby sees the different look of the male or
female caretaker. The male and female care-takers may say
different words, and sing different songs. And the differences
are not simply that they are different people, but that they
have typical female or male characteristics, which are easily
sensed by the baby, and NOT EASILY IGNORED by the baby.
The baby gets the same general soothing message from either
nurturer, but the details are very different. After awhile,
the baby understands that there are two different care-givers
and s/he associates one set of sensations with one and a
different set of sensations with the other.
I don't think you can deny that that happens for the baby.
The question for MENNOTES is
Is this difference important?
And if it is important, do we judge the difference to be good
or bad? That is, do we want the baby (whether boy or girl)
to feel the difference between the sensations from one parent
and the sensations from the other parent?
And if we think those different sensations are good, what other
qualities would we like the baby to associate with that difference?
And as the baby/child/teen progresses through the years,
what other differences do we think the b/c/t will get in the
way of nurturing its growth (physical, psychological, mental,
etc) from each parent, and how do we judge the worth of those
differences? Are there differences that we would like to
avoid and are there differences that we would like to keep,
even enhance?
Bly says it is vitally important for the baby to resonate to
those female cellular vibrations while it is in the womb.
It dies if it can't "tune" to the mother. And the same
for the months following birth, at least with respect to
breast feeding in our culture, and in all respects in more
primitive cultures where babies are raised to initiation
age by the women.
Well, we don't have initiations in our culture. And the PC
thing to do these days is to erase the differences that
would require an initiation. Mom and dad both cook, clean,
teach, guide, scold, praise, earn money outside the house,
etc. So what qualities would we like b/c/t to associate
with facial hair, with voice quality, with particular odors,
body shape, etc?
*****************
I painted a picture of an infant crying in the night.
You can paint your own picture of a five year old who has
fallen from a bike and is crying over a scraped elbow.
Or a ten year old who has returned home with a failing
grade on a report card. Or a thirteen year old who has
a crush on someone and has been cruelly rejected. Or a
sixteen year old with a speeding ticket.
Wil
|
603.15 | | VINO::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Jun 17 1991 18:39 | 9 |
| I guess it's all up to the individual families. Some are brought up in
the Athenian way and others the Spartan way. The diversity in family
structures ensures the diversity in the individuals. And we need all of
them, Spartans and Athenians.
Eugene
|
603.16 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Electric Ecstasy | Tue Jun 18 1991 10:28 | 48 |
| re: Wil
Excellent and thought provoking note!
> So, the PC thing to say these days is that men and women can
> do the nurturing equally well
I'm not convinced that this concept is based on mere political correctness.
You seem to be questioning whether this is true here. Do you really think that
men are inferior nurturers? On what do you base this conclusion? Have you never
met a "real man" that was also a good nurturer?
You raise an interesting and important point that each parent contributes
something subtly different in nurturing the child, and that it is far better
to have two loving parents than it is to have one because the two parents
tend to complement each other and provide more varied and complete nurturing.
> Is this difference important?
I do think that the difference is important. To me it is a matter similar to
listening to a stereo recording versus listening to one channel of a stereo
recording or a mono recording. Many single parents are like listening to one
half of a stereo recording. They offer all of the nurturing and experiences
they would if they were in a dual parental situation, and a little of what
the other parent would offer. Some parents are like a mono recording; they offer
the nurturing and experiences they would have if they were in a dual parental
situation, plus most of what the other parent would offer. That's about as good
as you can get from a single parent. But when the other parent is there, you
have stereo, an entire new dimension in caregiving. By obtaining the stereo
separation, we add definition to the same experiences and nurturing that the
mono parent brings, and more. While one parent can be very good, adding a second
parent opens up so much more potential.
>And the PC thing to do these days is to erase the differences
In many ways this is true. In an attempt to bring about fundamental fairness,
many have simply ignored the subtleties of the male and female difference
and declared that men and women are equivalent. Well, roughly speaking, this
is true enough. But when we get beyond the point of "men are good at only
these things" and "women are good at these things but not at those things,"
we get to a point where the granularity is such that we can recognize and
indeed celebrate the subtle differences between men and women. Eventually we
will reach a point where the differences are not used as barriers, but instead
are used as enhancements of the human experience. And the same will ring true
for cultural differences (one would hope.) Our children will be far better off
for it.
The Doctah
|
603.17 | From a man who does it.... | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:18 | 42 |
| I'm a man and I have the main responsibility for our 3 kids. I'm
convinced that at least 90% of the "differences" in the attitudes and
capabilities of men and women with respect to caring for kids is
cultural.
I simply don't relate in the least to most of the sincere but
self-absorbed ruminations men seem to make on this subject.
To me, the issues are practical, and non-sex specific: Do you like the
style of work that requires a lot of simultaneous "multi-tasking"? Do
you like being self-employed? Can you handle unstructured situations?
Do you find something to enjoy, or at least to be interested in,
in almost anything you do? Do you find delight in guiding, teaching,
including? Do you define yourself primarily by your values or by your
place in society?
Depending on your answers, you may be a good candidate for involved
parenthood. Plenty of women stuck at home would be happier (and so
would their kids) if they weren't there. They know that, and have
fought for the chance to live their lives differently. Men haven't.
They either throw up their hands and say they hate the idea, or they
wistfully talk about it but don't do anything about it. (I by no means
discount the two-earner issue, as I am fully aware of the decline in
the living standard of the last 15 years that requires it - but that's
another [semi-]topic.)
I only urge those who are interested to think hard, plan, and take a
chance. I'll give a concrete example of how perceived barriers are not
always as insurmountable as they seem. After the birth of our second
child, I took the 2-month paternal leave, *and* arranged to come back
part-time. After the birth of our third, at my first "one-on-one" with
my new boss, I told him that I would be quitting, because part-timers
could not take parental leave, and because I didn't want to settle for
a mere 2 months at home with the new one (I had been home 1 1/2 years
with number one, before I came to work for DEC). My bosses went to work
and got me a year's leave, then I came back part-time again. Situations
(and degrees of enlightenment) vary. The point is, I'm good at what I
do, the company needed me, I already had my priorities straight, and
they accomodated me.
Kit
|
603.18 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:42 | 66 |
| RE:603.16
>> So, the PC thing to say these days is that men and women can
>> do the nurturing equally well
>
> I'm not convinced that this concept is based on mere political correctness.
>You seem to be questioning whether this is true here. Do you really think that
>men are inferior nurturers? On what do you base this conclusion? Have you never
>met a "real man" that was also a good nurturer?
I am not questioning whether men and women can do the
nurturing equally well, but rather whether it is the "same", in
the sense of interchangeable. I think it is a question of detail,
of granularity as you called it.
If I can go back to the example I gave of a parent rocking a baby
back to sleep in the middle of the night, I would say that either
parent can do that equally well. The baby needed (we assume) some
kind of assurance that it was being cared for, it needed to be held,
crooned to, fussed over, whatever, and a "real man" can certainly
do that to the baby's satisfaction. So can a "real woman".
But along with getting the satisfaction that the baby needed,
s/he got a lot of other messages about the parent that did the
nurturing. I agree with you it is like stereo. Either channel
delivers enough to get by, but two channels deliver a much
richer message, because they aren't the same.
----------------------------
And part of what the baby needs over the long run is to be able
to hear and appreciate both channels, as the INDIVIDUALS that they
are and as the MODELS that they are for maleness and femaleness.
The baby is going to grow up and have to be either a male or a
female and have to relate to males and females. The baby does
not grow up to be a "person."
The baby's body and the society in which it grows up are both
going to conspire to make it either male or female. The parent's
job is to help it grow into the best man or woman that they can.
If the man does not like being a man and the woman does not like
being a woman, if they insist that they are "persons" and if they
work to make the baby grow up into the best non-genderized "person"
that they can, I think they are doing an incredible disservice to
the child.
(Don't make the assumption that I think there are specific tasks
for men or women. Women can be CEOs if they want to and men can
run the home if they want to.)
That takes me back to the same questions: As a man, what do I
want my kids (both male and female kids) to know about what it
is to be a man? And what is it about being a man that only I
or another man can model?
(There's a perfect parallel here regarding how my kids learn
about what it is to be a woman, but only a woman can MODEL it.)
Finding the answer to those questions is very hard work. Fifty
years ago, everyone knew the answers. Today, everything is up in
the air and we are trying to find what feels right for ourselves.
"The women's movement" and the "men's movement" are wrestling
with those questions.
We have Rambo, Robert Bly, Mister Rogers, our fathers, mentors,
etc, all modeling it for us.
Wil
|
603.19 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Jun 18 1991 13:30 | 16 |
| re: .18
> The baby does not grow up to be a "person."
I disagree. First and foremost, the baby is a person. Maleness and
femaleness are attributes of the person, as are height, temperament,
intelligence, etc, etc.
I submit that almost all attributes attached to maleness or femaleness
are culturally derived (other than the obvious physiological). Over the
centuries many of these have been shed, and look entirely foolish when
we read of them, but many more remain. It's not a question of not
liking being a male, or not liking being a female, but of speciously
defining sex by attributes that have nothing to do with sex.
Kit
|
603.20 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Animal Magnetism | Tue Jun 18 1991 15:24 | 8 |
| >I am not questioning whether men and women can do the
>nurturing equally well, but rather whether it is the "same", in
>the sense of interchangeable.
You threw me with the "PC" and "equally well" part there. Thanks for
clarifying.
The Doctah
|
603.21 | dad with triplets! | DPDMAI::MATTSON | It's always something! | Wed Jun 19 1991 13:35 | 21 |
| This has been a good discussion - and I wanted to share with you what
my cousin and wife are doing.
They have 2 year old triplets - and guess who has stayed home with them
thes past 2 years? Yep, Dad. Mom went back to work after 6 weeks, and
has been working full time since. Dad has been at home, actually since
before the birth, since it was a rather difficult pregnancy, and was
taking care of mom during that time.
One of the reasons, for this was because mom is a corporate lawyer (not
with DEC) and frankly, makes more money. This arrangement has worked
out very well, everyone is happy and fine. The only people who were
upset were Dad's parents. They were shocked that the roles were
"reversed" like this and couldn't understand why there son could "give
up his career" and why his wife "could leave her children like that."
I personally, think children should be with a parent (if at all
possible) and NOT placed in day care! (Thats a REAL HOT issue with
me! Maybe should go into another note.)
Becky
|
603.23 | my 2 cents | EPIK::MELBIN | | Mon Jun 24 1991 09:29 | 16 |
| It was good to see this note; our third child is due in Novemeber and we've
come to the conclusion that daycare just isn't 'it' anymore (especically
with shows like Prime Time). In anycase, we've been discussing that a parent
will suspend their career for at least a few years, and that's dad. In all
honesty, I believe he's better at it that I am when dealing with coming up
with activities, etc to keep the kids amused, stimulated, etc. When they
were just little babies, I seemed to be more in tune with them; the four
year old has more fun playing with dad and that's that. For the kids, I think
it's best for both parents to contribute where they can. He does worry that
when he goes back to work outside-home, people might wonder why he choose
to stay home (people still expect mom to do that); I hope it won't be
a problem. I think my 2 daughters are lucky their dad doesn't let that stop
him from doing what he feels is right.
julie
|
603.25 | yep | EPIK::MELBIN | | Wed Jun 26 1991 11:21 | 2 |
| That is my plan - luckly I've been able to pump milk in the past (previous
baby)while at work - it is dificult but worth it - thanks for your reply
|