T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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646.1 | What's the topic? | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 08:45 | 4 |
| Is the following an accurate restatement of .0 ?
I would like to stay home and be a home-maker, and let someone else
pay the bills, and that should be OK in our society.
|
646.2 | Clarification: | PROXY::POWERS | Bridget Powers | Tue Sep 17 1991 09:49 | 7 |
| Almost, but not exactly...
How 'bout...
"Of all the careers that women can have, homemaking is one of the most
difficult and personally rewarding ones there are. So why does homemaking
get dumped on by everyone?"
|
646.3 | Questions for you... | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Tue Sep 17 1991 10:16 | 7 |
| Because your definition of homemaking doesn't agree with their
definition... Perhaps if you could explain what your definition (what
homemaking means to you) is we could get a better idea of where you
want to go with your question. So, why do you feel homemaking is such
a great career choice? The old-fashioned picture we get is that
homemakers were always women. What's wrong/right about this picture?
What are the characteristics of a good homemaker, why?
|
646.5 | Say, girls, let's discuss Ladies Home Journal while the kids play! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 14:48 | 13 |
| "Most difficult and personally rewarding" -- there's an oxymoron for
you. It is NOT difficult to do personally rewarding work. It is
difficult to do work which has no intrinsic rewards at all, only
extrinsic rewards (MONEY) which makes it possible for princesses to sit
at home with Baby. Modern appliances have reduced house-keeping to a
several-hour-per-week job (Saturday morning used to handle it for me).
Mothering consists of dawdling at the park or lake with the toddler, or
reading romance novels while the three-year-old sits zombie-like in
front of the TV. It's a no brains, no talent, no training, no
qualifications (except fertility and getting a man to do it to you)
job.
That could have something to do with why it doesn't get respect.
|
646.6 | More than a few hours needed... | NESIGN::GROARK | In our 3rd straight rebuilding year... | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:12 | 14 |
| re: -1
>> (Saturday morning used to handle it for me)
I hope you had a very small house. Being a homemaker entails much more than
sitting around eating bon-bon's while the kids "veg" on TV. How 'bout the
laundry for the household, grocery shopping, meal preparation/clean-up, etc.
Not to mention trying spending time with the children; reading to them, playing
with them, fixing things for them, helping them along with ideals.morals.
All of the IS very rewarding, but that does not make it EASY. It very trying
mentally and physically.
John G.
|
646.8 | | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:14 | 26 |
| re.5 is this just to get a response or are you for real?
I can't really say that taking care of my little ones was exactly
difficult. It was mostly fun! Fortunately, while I was married,
my husband and I didn't argue over it, but when our 1st baby was
6 mos. I went to work at McDonalds while Daddy had her at night.
We had parent share, you could say. But, while I helped support
bringing in the income, he had a satisfying job that he went to
school for and I slaved for 6 hours flipping burgers. I finally
insisted on going to school, which eventually led to a divorce,
(more complex than this), but the point is:
we, both sexes, should have options, (money helps create more options).
I think that by women saying that "homemaking" is hard that they
are really trying to justify their occupation, (not career); when
they should just say that they enjoy homemaking and to hell with
anyone that doesn't appreciate that. And if their mate can help
them with that lifestyle than terrific. (this mate can be the father
or the mother by the way).
If I just plain 'ole want to watch my kids grow up under my nose
than that's all the reason I need. (of course, with a little help
from my mate) and what if neither one of us has kids and just plain
'ole want to stay home to pursue other pursuits, someone still has
to bring home the bacon. As long as the couple involved are satisfied
in the arrangement, that's the ticket!
|
646.10 | MY mom WORKED for a living (God bless her) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 16:15 | 30 |
| Of the twenty-five million avid readers of romance novels in the United
States, 99% are female. They read an average of ten novels per month. I
infer from the rate that these are non-working women, i.e. Susie
Home-makers.
According to Nielsen, the average American household has the television
on 54 hours per week. Our children are less fit than ever. Their test
scores have fallen steadily, despite ever more resources going to the
schools. TV is everyone's favorite baby-sitter.
We eat more meals out than ever before. Dishwashers reduce dinner
clean-up to a fifteen minute exercise. Convenience foods crowd out the
real stuff in the groceries, so dinner takes fifteen minutes to
prepare. Spending more than an hour cooking and cleaning up afterwards
isn't work, it's either dawdling or entertainment (lots of people enjoy
it).
I have so much heat about this because Princess is just waiting for
some schmuck MAN to take her away from her low-paying, unsatisfying
job, which is what she's stuck with because she never expected to need
anything better. Then she has lots of babies, so he has to take out a
mortgage on a four-bedroom Colonial, eventually dying from the strain
of trying to make the payments. Princess gets the hugs and adoration,
Daddy gets the bills.
I'll get over this when (1) Mom's role is larger than preparing
mac'n'cheese and turning on Sesame Street, and (2) Dad gets to play Mom
half the time. In the meanwhile, this "Momhood is all" crap is just a
ticket to a DIFFICULT LIFE CHOOSING WHICH SELF-ACTUALIZING, NO-STRESS
ACTIVITY I'LL DRAG BABY TO TODAY!
|
646.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Sep 17 1991 16:53 | 21 |
| Gee, Hoyt, it seems this is a "hot button" for you. I agree with Herb
(now don't faint, Herb!) that your espoused view of parenting is rather
far removed from reality. I don't doubt that there are a few examples
which might resemble your description, but I would disagree strongly that
it is in any way a typical depiction of a mother's life. (Or that of
a father who takes care of the children, either.)
Do you have children? Have you ever been the primary caregiver for a child?
I have (and am).
Regarding the base note, it is true that the "homemaker" is ill-regarded
in today's society, and I think that is a shame. Caring for children
full-time and keeping up a house on one's own is a daunting task that
challenges most anyone who takes it on. That we've reduced a person's
worth to what they get paid is a sorry state. But I think we have to
be careful in wishing for a "return to old-fashionedness" lest we
inadvertently roll back the advances we've made so far in equal
opportunity and protection of men and women. (It's far from equal now, but
it's better than it had been 20 years ago.)
Steve
|
646.13 | Stay away from Princess!!! | NESIGN::GROARK | In our 3rd straight rebuilding year... | Tue Sep 17 1991 17:10 | 25 |
| re: -1
> I have so much heat about this because Princess is just waiting for
> some schmuck MAN to take her away from her low-paying, unsatisfying
> job, which is what she's stuck with because she never expected to need
> anything better. Then she has lots of babies, so he has to take out a
> mortgage on a four-bedroom Colonial, eventually dying from the strain
> of trying to make the payments. Princess gets the hugs and adoration,
> Daddy gets the bills.
Then stay away from "Princess"!
In the mean time, try not to put down a lot of dedicated, hard working people.
My wife gave up a career because she felt it more important to raise her
children full-time. She initially wanted to try to juggle both, but wasn't
happy with that arrangment. Other women may feel differently, and that's their
personal choice.
She now works part-time at night (not at her intended career-strickly for the
money) and I get to "play mom" those four nights.
These sweeping generalizations make you sound like a very bitter person.
John G.
|
646.14 | After all, Steve, YOU are a primary care giver! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 17:31 | 42 |
| Gee, Steve, what part of the depiction isn't on target? The romance
novels get read. If you go to Walden Pond any weekday afternoon, you'll
see hordes of Mommies reading them. Or the park. Or the tennis club
(well, they don't read at the tennis club). You've been a primary care
provider, Steve, a privilege of which I'm genuinely envious. Does this
mean that dishwashers aren't prevalent, preprepared meals the norm, and
that the TV really isn't on 54 hours per week? I missed the connection.
I'm not a father. I'm a step-father (ref. MENNOTES 591 "John") but my
relationship with my wife's children is more like "Mom's adult friend."
HER relationship with her children is like "the house-keeper." The kids
have explained in some detail that parenting (rules, conversations,
family activities, chores) are NOT very 90's, so we've given them up.
Mom is the food-money-transport object. I'm the math-help object. Like
most American children, mine spend their lives taking breaks from TV to
go to the movies. If THIS depiction seems rather far removed from
reality, Steve, then I will bet you $20 that your child/children is/are
less than 13 years old. Wanna bet?
We have a woman living in the first floor of our apartment who has a
three-year-old son and a three-month-old daughter, and finds their
supervision too daunting to handle herself. Joey is in play-care three
mornings per week. My step-daughters have a regular gig "entertaining"
Joey while Elizabeth gets her bath. In the house with the dishwasher,
clothes washer, etc. My mother's mother raised seven children by
herself, when dinner was cooked over wood or coal, clothes were washed
by hand (in her luxurious period, she had a hand-cranked wringer), a
bath meant MORE wood/coal and multiple trips with the cauldron. And
she raised seven outstanding children. While working to buy food.
Expectations of parents role is so TINY nowadays. Expectations of
children is so small. A great parent is one who develops Johnny's
self-esteem (gag, choke). A great kid is one who stays in school, drug
and pregnancy free. And we've been told so MANY times that Mommy has it
SO hard, that even the Mommies believe it, as they drop Joey off at
play-care so they can take Elizabeth for a tranquil walk around the
park.
No, on second though, you're right, Steve. I'm making it all up. It is
some OTHER country where kids sit in front of TVs for 54 hours per
week, where SAT tests continually fall, where the day-time leisure
activities are enjoyed by 95% women. Maybe it's something I ate.
|
646.15 | | ISSHIN::MATTHEWS | OO -0 -/ @ | Tue Sep 17 1991 17:41 | 5 |
| <<< Note 646.14 by PENUTS::HNELSON "Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif" >>>
-< After all, Steve, YOU are a primary care giver! >-
Since we're talking old fashioned here, it sounds as though your step kids
could do with a good boot in the a$$. It's always worked for me.
|
646.16 | great living!, until I remember the time... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | What a glorious summer that was... | Tue Sep 17 1991 17:50 | 37 |
|
As a person_without_child, yeah, I can see how I might feel that
being the homemaker is an easy job requiring only a few hours a
week. Having fun taking an hour to cook dinner and clean up after
(on the few nights it's not re-heated left-overs or Budget
Gourmet's or streamed vegetables for the diet prone), taking no more
than two hour's time dumping your and your SO's laundry into the
washer then dryer once every two weeks, enjoying the high point of
the week in going grocery shopping, and taking another two hours
cleaning the bathrooms, vacuuming, etc once every two weeks (other
than daily 2-minute touch up). Not much work. In fact most of us
who work can easily do it on top of a full time job and _still_
have plenty of free time left. Most of those 'chores' like cooking
and going grocery shopping my SO and I look upon as enjoyable
quality time we spend together. We look greatly forward to it.
Do this for a living? It must be great!
But I couldn't do it. No way. Not when children come on the scene.
Once I was hospitalized and had to stay with a friend's wife all
day, oh my, I could hardly stand it for that one day! Screaming
children that have to be run after every five minutes, every time
you turn your back some other catastrophe happens. It was enough
to drive you crazy! An unnerving experience. Would never want to
be in that environment and position. Not for twice what I'm getting
paid here. Just not something I could do (well). At least that's
what I say at this point in my life.
Under-paid and unrespected. You bet. Just like all social service
jobs (formerly called "women's jobs" in the 'good' ole fashioned
days). Though quite a few men would love to be able to take that
role too despite the obvious pay cut... Some people are just good
at it (regardless of gender), and other people aren't. Me and
Murphy Brown, we aren't... :-)
-Erik
|
646.17 | Hoyt Nelson, DWM, 39, bitter, ... | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 17:50 | 20 |
| "My wife gave up a career because she felt that it was more important
to raise her children part-time."
Why didn't YOU give up YOUR career, John. Didn't think raising the kids
was that important? Or was it that YOU didn't have that choice, and SHE
did, because we live in a world where every Princess gets to make that
choice, and her Prince gets to go to work. You're another victim, John.
Every woman out there is a potential Princess. It's how they are
trained, as we are trained to go to work to provide for the family.
"Avoid Princesses" translates to "live alone and childless."
I sound bitter, huh? Is that now on the proscribed list, along with
angry and horny? If so, many apologies. Gosh, nice day isn't it. How
about them Red Sox. [Manly grin and punch in the arm.] Happy now?
Have fun as you "play mom", John. NEVER get confused and think of is
as "play Dad" or (even worse) "be Dad." I suppose you're "playing Dad"
right now, huh, working for a living. Be thankful for your four nights;
I bet they don't last.
|
646.19 | And it's... | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Tue Sep 17 1991 18:27 | 2 |
| Hoyt Nelson, the Al Bundy of MENNOTES...
|
646.20 | | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Tue Sep 17 1991 18:49 | 12 |
| re.17
I think you picked the wrong princess. You speak of undisciplined
kids of today. Who the heck runs your house? It's your own fault,
not ours. There are male homemakers. Do you want to be a prince?
Are you mad 'cause your wife has choices which you gave to her or
you seem to justify by default. Why the heck do you want kids if
you' are bitter over them as well. I guess you've chosen the better
of 2 evils by your definition. Take some responsibility!
By the way, do you like Romance Novels and wish you had more time
to read them. Just grab one while you're in the bathroom taking
a seat next time.
|
646.21 | HOW ABOUT A POSITIVE PICTURE !? | HSOMAI::BUSTAMANTE | | Tue Sep 17 1991 18:59 | 21 |
| Re: Hoyt Nelson's comments:
You show a bleak picture of motherhood in America very well. Now, how
about showing us your "dream scenario"?
Incidently your picture may have a few smudges: not all wives prepare
instant meals, some cook almost every day from scratch. Also, I've seen
many switchboard operators, receptionists, beauty salon workers,
librarians, etc. reading romance novels. Even in Digital's temps !
So much for your statistics!
I value very highly the personal sacrifice of some women to provide a
positive influence in the first few years of a child's life. So many
toddlers I know who go to day care, spend many days per year ill due to
the lack of hygiene of those places.
We have a two-year-old son and I have also had to modify my reading and
playing habits to give him my attention not just because his self
esteem is important but also because he is a joy in my life! It's
really no "sacrifice" except for those late hours when he "refuses" to
fall asleep!
|
646.22 | Parental Presence vs. Development ? | PROXY::POWERS | Bridget Powers | Tue Sep 17 1991 19:03 | 9 |
|
I thought that there was a pronounced distinction between those who
were 'old-fashioned' about family life, and those who weren't, but I didn't
expect some of the really strong feelings here.
What about opinions from m/f homemakers and from parents who have
their children in daycare (and outside opinions from us not-parents-yet
people) regarding the long-term effects of parental presence/non-presence
on the psychological development of the children?
|
646.23 | Where is my Princess Leia (top rebels earn big $$$ :) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Tue Sep 17 1991 19:21 | 34 |
| Sorry, Bridget, I've been waxing self-righteous. It's a character flaw,
I sincerely admit regretting.
Some replies, and I'll leave you in peace.
I know who Al Bundy is, but I don't get the joke, probably. Al is the
victim in his family, right, for whom they all have contempt, whose
only purpose is to pass out cash? Then aren't we all Al Bundy's? Or is
Al just dumb? I deny being dumb.
Scarberry_ci:
Obviously I don't run my house. I want to be a Princess, i.e. a
home-maker. I want kids because they would be neat people I would enjoy
knowing and contributing to the world. I'm bitter because I've been
doing everything right, by the prescription society wrote out, and I
find myself being the provider (Prince) for someone else's children,
and those children are a great disappointment. I've never read romance
novels, but from the way they are characterized, I think I'll avoid
them like poison. They are Princess-training manuals.
A positive view: Alright! Good idea!
The person studies hard to learn a profession and thru work and talent
becomes capable of supporting a family. The person marries a similar
person, and together they bring some number of children in the world.
The two persons share their two responsibilties, as parents and as
providers. Both persons enjoy professional success. Both persons enjoy
a close relationship with their children. Probably they share the
physical care workload, by alternately leaving their jobs. They strive
to avoid type-casting by gender: no Prince or Princess here, only
loving parents who work for a living.
Is that so much to ask?
|
646.24 | THE most important job in life, bar none... | SOLVIT::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Wed Sep 18 1991 09:08 | 36 |
| Barbara Bush summed it up when she spoke at Wellesley College a few
years ago: ( I paraphrase)
'You will never regret or remember a report that you failed to write or
spend time on when you are older, but you will regret time not spent
with your children' (this is a very loose translation)
Parenting, especially in the early years of a childs life is extreemly
inportant. To important to be treated as a 2nd class job. It is THE
most important job in a persons life - to train and prepare the next
generation for life in this complex world. To demean it, to say 'you
can have it all (AKA super mom) is a lie. To say that day care is
better? Better than what? Child abuse? I suppose. Better or equal to a
caring, nuturing at home mother (or father)? I have a bridge for you...
My wife has a friend who lived in some of the worst dives/dumps in
Framingham MA that I have ever seen so she could raise her daughter.
So she could be home for her. So she could teach her her values, not
societies, not the 'values of the week', not what some book said. I
went to her wedding last spring. That little girl I met 20+ years ago
is one of the nicest persons I know or have ever met. Why, because of
her mother and her very sacraficing committment to her daughter.
Hoyt:
I was surrogate dad/step dad to 10 year old and 13 year old girls for
about five years. Some of my best memories of my life are my times with
them. They wern't mine, I had no authority with them/over them, yet
they are something I will never forget. I hope I changed their lives
for the better, I know they did mine.... I loved and cared and was as
concerned for them as much as for my own two children.
It is how you react to a given situation, not the situation itself.
Steve
|
646.25 | I'm happy with my life... | NESIGN::GROARK | In our 3rd straight rebuilding year... | Wed Sep 18 1991 09:51 | 24 |
| Wake up Hoyt! How many companies allow you to take a leave of absense for an
undetermined period of time because it's your turn to be homemaker. "Sorry boss,
I've got to be out the next two years, it's my wife's turn to be the moneymaker."
Nice idea, but not very practical at this time.
At the time my wife decided to stay home rather than continue to pursue her
career, I had been employed by Digital for 12 years and made substantially
more money than she did. The choice for who stayed home was based on logic, not
her unwillingness to work. The is real life Hoyt, right or wrong.
I enjoy "playing mom" (that was a tongue-in-cheek remark last time). I enjoy the
time I get with my daughters, and they enjoy me. I am not Mommy, I am Daddy. The
relationship and person are different. The play activities are different. Don't
continue to make light of this releationship that many families have because you
don't.
BTW, when you quote someone, try to do it accurately. What I said was...
"My wife gave up a career because she felt it more important to raise her
children full-time."
Maybe you can sit down and discuss what you have said here to your wife and her
kids. Let them know how you feel about the situation. I might help.
John G.
|
646.27 | oops.. | NESIGN::GROARK | In our 3rd straight rebuilding year... | Wed Sep 18 1991 09:57 | 3 |
| That last line is suppose to be - IT might help.
John G.
|
646.28 | One more reason: she WANTS to stay home (BFD) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Wed Sep 18 1991 10:23 | 68 |
| I had my rapier-like (bludgeon-like?) wit out yesterday, John... I
apologize for inflicting in upon you.
Your story is repeated thousands and thousands of times every year. "I
make a little more money than my wife, so she stays home." In other
words, the deciding qualification for mommyhood was her professional
incompetence. I'm NOT trying to get personal here. Lets understand I'm
not talking about anyone in particular. OVER 99% of the time, however,
this is exactly the way the decision-making goes. Beginning in eighth
grade, when Mary learns that boys are supposed to take care of her (and
they don't LIKE smart girls), Mary makes choice after choice after
choice that ultimately results in Mary being the one to stay home. She
skips physics. She majors in history of art. She disdains that masters
degree evening program. She quits her job and takes care of Baby. A
very old story.
So who is raising our children? We're systematically selecting the half
of the partnership which is less effective in the workplace. And it
worked for her, so she blithely passes the strategy onto the kids, esp.
her daughters. The differential treatment of children is
well-documented: daughters are smiled at more, coddled more; little
boys are trained to tough it out, as preparation for those one-day
office battles. And the injust gender-casting is perpetuated into the
next generation.
One irritating side-light to this is that the comparatively rare women
who have made the choices to pursue high-paying careers are MORE likely
to prefer still higher-paid men for husbands. High-paid women are MORE
likely to remain single unless a really well-provisioned Prince happens
along... because these Princesses can support themselves, and
IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD, NO ONE HAS EVEN SUGGESTED THAT SHE
SHOULD SUPPORT HER HUSBAND THE HOME-MAKER.
The classic example of this is women MDs -- the modal husband for these
well-paid women is another equally-well-paid MD. Tell me this is
great family planning. "Let's see, honey, since I have an extremely
high-stress, hyper-demanding, no-home-life job... why don't I marry
you, since you don't have any time either!" Brilliant.
I acknowledge the practical difficulties of starting/stopping careers.
It happens that I'm well-positioned to do so: as a contractor, I can
come and go with NO loss of pension (none to lose), etc. I've also been
living on 75% of my income for four years, so I'd have cash in the bank
that would let me meet my share of the bills EVEN WHILE BEING JOHNNY
HOME-MAKER. Yes, we're talking Super-Dad here: spends all day with his
Baby, and STILL pays his share of the bills (by accumulating the filthy
lucre in advance). This has represented some sacrifice, e.g. my car is
by far the most decrepit vehicle in the parking lot, our apartment is
one step removed from a student-slum (but we own it!). I live this way
because I am DETERMINED to experience that home-maker role. I wish that
our society made it a little easier for ALL men.
My heat here isn't for my purposes. I've been comfortable with these
issues for a long time, like twenty years (the first time I heard about
feminism, I thought "Great, wonderful, about time... she's going to
take on her share of the financial responsibility" -- around 1970). It
amazes me that 99% of men don't see this issue. "I make more money than
my wife, so she stays home." Over and over and over. "...the most
rewarding job in the world..." And she gets it because you (men) are
more competent in the workplace.
Well, it's really not my business if you want to watch your children
grow up without knowing them, always being second-place in their
affections, with your role limited to mean-Dad-the-disciplinarian and
nice-Dad-the-source-of-money. Enjoy, if you can. More power to you.
I say no thanks, I'll stay at home with the kids.
|
646.29 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Wed Sep 18 1991 11:28 | 19 |
| I never look at anyone and say, "tsk, tsk, they're doing things wrong."
Most of us do the best we know how. My wife gave up her profession to
be Mom. Our daughters are very happy intelligent well-adjusted kids. But
because of the economic situation we've gotten into from being a single
(albeit good) income family, I'm not sure we'll be able to send them to
the schools of their choice. I'm also not sure that we haven't built
into them, just by the sheer force of example, the notion that women are
Mom's and don't have careers. After all, it was my wife who had this
urge to be mother, like her mother before her, not me. There are lots of
families I know where both parents work, and I haven't yet seen any
problems in their kids, at least that I can with any assurance attribute
to the daycare situation and not just to toxicity in the relationship.
We're all trying to survive, and the decisions are not often easy or
obvious. I feel neither superior or inferior to anyone who has done
things differently from the way I've done things.
- Vick
|
646.30 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Sep 19 1991 06:23 | 25 |
| The author of .28 seems to have had very unfortunate experiences.
My wife has only worked full-time for about 6 months since we married
over 20 years ago, but...
While the kids were growing up she organised and ran several
pre-school playgroups. At one time most of the vegetables that we ate
were what she had grown.
Currently as unpaid voluntary work she helps to run a local
library and teaches English. She also has a part time job, where
"part time" means that it varies from 6 to 50 hours per week. She will
be going away for three weeks soon, and has spent some of her time
making (not buying) instant meals and freezing them for me and our 12
year old daughter. She also organises all the family finances, making
sure that bills are paid on time and that we do not exceed our budget.
Her contribution to the family income is small in terms of money,
but I am not complaining. (By the way, in her spare time she also
keeps the house spotlessly clean and does the swimming pool maintenance
and most of the cooking).
Our elder daughter has spent the last few weeks repainting the house
to earn some extra pocket money, so I think we are bringing her up
right.
|
646.31 | Man, supported by wife, tells all | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Thu Sep 19 1991 14:09 | 40 |
| Hoyt --
I think most men do *not* feel trapped in the way you have described.
Many say quite forthrightly that they couldn't stand the life of
running a household and raising children. Many others use the excuses
you have outlined ("I earn more money, so, alas, I can't stay home").
Most well-educated men think they have better things to do (as do, not
surprisingly, a great many of their equally well-educated wives) than
wash dishes and diapers.
They're wrong, by and large, but that's the way it is. Even among those
for whom life at home would be easier and more interesting than working
(i.e., the supermarket cashier and the loading dock worker), there is a
lot of self-delusion about the attractions of work.
And, yes, running a household can be easier than working a regular job,
but only for the right person. It's a lot like being self-employed: no
one's telling you what to do (so you do get time to read the paper or
just sit down from time to time), but there's a lot that has to get
done, or else. Also, if you're the type that can handle a dozen things
simultaneously -- moving from one to the other and back without losing
context -- the job's for you. If you work methodically and with careful
concentration on one job at a time and expect perfection, you're in for
a life of frustration at home.
It's not a male/female thing, it's what the couple wants. In my case,
when we were ready for kids, my wife was more interested in a busy
professional career, and we both agreed that I was better at the type
of work I've just described. I've been home with our 3 children (ages
7,4,2) up to as much as 1 1/2 years at a time, and worked part-time
most of the rest of the time. She knew that meant she was "supporting"
me completely, or at least earning a lot more than I can.
We chose that course. We did not allow society to impose on us any
particular roles. The women's movement of the last 20 years certainly
made that choice a lot easier. Women have opted for the choice of work
vs stay at home. Men should do the same, and should not blame women
when they do not.
Kit
|
646.33 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Thu Sep 19 1991 14:38 | 9 |
| I tried the traditional relationship. I worked a second job and managed
two apartment buildings, AND did a 40+ hour to keep them home near the
home fire. Got fleeced with the traditional courts in the process when
she (the_future_ex_to_be) TFXTB, took the baby into the woods of Maine.
Gee, I donno. I guess I am getting confused here. As in folks giving up
carriers to become homemakers, but sometimes little credit is given to
the folks who park their cars/trucks between the white lines in the
parking lots every day. I don't want to take the thunder out of this
lovely note..... But.....
|
646.34 | Bless feminists, Kit, and his lovely wife | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Thu Sep 19 1991 16:55 | 80 |
| Nice note, Kit! It sounds like you've had a very nice situation.
Please tell your wife she has a secret admirer (whose never even
SEEN her).
Some responses:
>I think most men do *not* feel trapped in the way you have described.
Agreed. They are trapped and don't feel it.
>Many say quite forthrightly that they couldn't stand the life of
>running a household and raising children. Many others use the excuses
>you have outlined ("I earn more money, so, alas, I can't stay home").
>Most well-educated men think they have better things to do (as do, not
>surprisingly, a great many of their equally well-educated wives) than
>wash dishes and diapers.
Agreed. Men accept the role.
>They're wrong, by and large, but that's the way it is. Even among those
>for whom life at home would be easier and more interesting than working
>(i.e., the supermarket cashier and the loading dock worker), there is a
>lot of self-delusion about the attractions of work.
Yes! Software engineers, too. Dock workers WORK! :)
Also rationalization: "If I have to work everyday, and she stays
home with Baby everyday, and I'm 'happy' (!!)... then work must be
rewarding and Baby mundane."
I think your comments about parenting being like self-employment
sound exactly on target, obviously the voice of experience.
>"...my wife was more interested in a busy career..."
More interested in career than she was in parenting? Like, she had the
choice and made it, only it happened to be the unconventional choice? Or
more interested than YOU were in a career, in which case you're BOTH
unusual (in a way I admire).
My complaint is that women have the choice (e.g. your wife) and men
don't. If the woman chooses to work, THEN the man has a choice, not
before. There is a STRONG STRONG presumption that men are the providers.
>"...we both agreed that I was better at the type of work..."
PRECISELY THE RIGHT CRITERION. Who would be the better parent? Not "who
has ovaries?"
>"She knew that meant she was 'supporting' me completely, or at least
>earning a lot more than I can."
This last sounds like the conventional decision rule, "Who makes more
money" only in this case her career competence exceeded yours. Or do
you mean more than you can earn, part-time and/or working occasionally?
>We chose that course. We did not allow society to impose on us any
>particular roles. The women's movement of the last 20 years certainly
>made that choice a lot easier. Women have opted for the choice of work
>vs stay at home. Men should do the same...
Good for you (sincerely). Absolutely. God bless the women's movement.
>and [men] should not blame women when they do not.
You lose me here.
Have men been blamed for women's role throughout the women's movement?
[Yes] Does the pattern of 99% of stay-at-home parents being female have
anything to do with women? [Yes]
IF WE ARE GOING TO CREATE FOR MEN A GENUINE OPTION TO BE THE
STAY-AT-HOME PARENT, SUPPORTED BY THEIR WIVES, DON'T YOU THINK
THAT WOMEN ARE GOING TO HAVE TO MAKE SOME CONSIDERABLE CHANGES?
I'd say: YES!
On the other hand, women aren't going to make any changes until men
wake up to the tragedy of their disciplinarian-money-tree role. In that
sense, I sgree: we men should blame ourselves.
|
646.35 | Get it straight before you're "trapped" | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Fri Sep 20 1991 08:47 | 40 |
| re: .34
>>"...my wife was more interested in a busy career..."
> More interested in career than she was in parenting? Like, she had the
> choice and made it, only it happened to be the unconventional choice? Or
> more interested than YOU were in a career, in which case you're BOTH
> unusual (in a way I admire).
Definitely more interested in a career than I. I have steadfastly
avoided a career since I first took a full-time job 28 years ago, at
age 16. I am a dilettante -- broad but shallow! I love my work, but
could not conceive of a life in which work became the dominant factor.
>"She knew that meant she was 'supporting' me completely, or at least
>earning a lot more than I can."
> This last sounds like the conventional decision rule, "Who makes more
> money" only in this case her career competence exceeded yours. Or do
> you mean more than you can earn, part-time and/or working occasionally?
At the time these decisions were made, we made about the same. We both
figured she'd likely be able to make more than I if she wanted. (That
turned out to be true, but she's always been in non-profits, social
service, government positions that require real entrepeneurial skills
but no corresponding big-bucks rewards. In general, we've tried to
resist the temptation to put too high a priority on money.)
I see your point about the fact that women, as much as men, may be
responsible for the fact that it is usually women who stay at home. I
can only say that, in my case, such issues are so fundamental to my
outlook on life that I could not conceive of *not* having sorted this
sort of thing out before settling down with someone. Moreover, I fell
in love with my wife precisely because of who she is: a woman who cuts a
gutsy and magnificent swath through the world, with passion and
purpose. How she does it mystifies and delights me every day, just as
my combination of academic smarts and down-home efficiency tickles her.
Kit
|
646.36 | How would *YOU* Feel...? | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:17 | 21 |
| What if the roles were *reversed*, however? I, for one, would love to be
more of a "homemaker". When I was married, at home, I was always the one
who did more of the cooking, cleaning, laundry, etc. took care of the
animals regularly; and would have preferred to remain at home more often
than my now-ex. She would do what I called the "Once_A_Month_Major_Chores_
to_Prove_I'm_A_Good_Homemaker" cleanings, and she did them well...but it
would often be me to take care of what needed to be taken care of on a
regular basis. All this, in addition to working 60 hour work weeks usually,
while she was busier *looking* for a "career" (which she *still* hasn't
"found" yet).
Not to pat myself on the back or anything like that...I'm merely saying
that *I* wouldn't mind staying at home, maybe running a business out of my
home, in addition to taking care of my home on a regular basis. But, there
would be a societal "stigma" attached if my spouse or SO were the one out
in the private sector "working".
I know I can support myself...I don't need a spouse to do this for me. I
would hope the person who might be "next" has the same capacity; but if
she wanted to remain at home, I would hope that they would not be looked
down upon either, if that's what they wanted to do.
|
646.37 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Wed Sep 25 1991 19:50 | 21 |
| re: .36
> But, there would be a societal "stigma" attached if my spouse or SO
> were the one out in the private sector "working".
If this is important to you, you first must identify specifically who you
mean by "society". If it's a member of your family or a friend who
looks askance at this proposed role, you can deal with it on that basis
-- work it out, learn to overlook this quirk in their personality (as
we all do and expect others to do for us), etc. If it's "society" in
general, you have to dig a little deeper to understand why you feel
uncomfortable with some generic society-level disapproval.
My experience has been that my going a bit against the grain is very
rewarding, rather than intimidating. I proselytize unceasingly for a
more involved role for men -- and I find people react very favorably.
And I couldn't be bothered with those who are rude or who simply react
with defensive ignorance (And these are very few).
Kit
|
646.38 | May you always have the freedom to be yourself | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed Sep 25 1991 20:43 | 19 |
| re. last couple
This kinda brings to mind the my wife earns more than I do deal.
I'm the woman, I'm more ambitious than my mate, I make more money
than he and probably always will, I think. I've figured out and
accepted this and so what what my Mom thinks or anyone else. I've
also left him alone to be comfortable with his style of living and
he's done likewise with mine.
That's about all you can do and all that I do. I guess to some
folks this could be embarrassing but I've come to feel comfortable
with the decisions I've made regarding my priorieties thus far in
my life.
I think once we, as in each household, decide for their own what's
best, than the better off the situation will become toward equality
or rather the freedom that one has to be him or her self.
|