T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
721.1 | Define True Success | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | | Thu Feb 11 1988 15:49 | 11 |
|
I would guess that, in preparation, a good thing would be to
instill a solid foundation of self esteem, with an icing of self
reliant behavior. Teach that success trully is in the here and now,
not in "making it to friday", or up to VP level, or to "retirement".
Read Jim Baranski's latest note in H_R, for some interesting
stats faced by all young men growing up to adulthood.
Joe
|
721.2 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:43 | 49 |
|
The future is starting to look pretty mean. How likely is
it that a boy that age will be "asked" to become cannon fodder?
(in Central America?) How likely is he to ever be able to retire,
or collect social security? (that was a rhetorical question, please
don't answer it.) The rich are getting richer, while the rest of
us have a task of heroic proportions to just succeed in even a minimal way.
Is it worth working to become a part of an adult world where what
you win is a greater chance at heart disease? Shall they work
to please a wife, when the statistics say they will get divorced
anyway?
If I had a son, now, I would give him a copy of "The Tracker"
by Tom Brown, and teach him that alternatives to modern society
do exist. I would try to help him find alternatives that
lead beyond the dead-end dilemmas of our modern society. I would
teach him that yuppyism and wealth are dead ends. I would strongly
advise all adolescent boys to learn some form of martial art, since
the world is rough, and getting rougher, and at least that way he
would have the confidence that comes with being able to defend one's
self.
I have told some young people that failure and getting "F"s
doesn't matter, so long as they continue to learn lessons from
what happens. In some cases getting an "F" is the right thing
to do, when the situation really calls for it. Grading on a
curve is wrong, since this system mandates that a large percentage
*will* fail. It is no shame to fail in such a system. The
essential is that they can go on learning, without identifying
themselves as permanant failures. (to learn to fail without
becoming "a failure")
There are alternatives, other than learning "to fit in".
Most boys want *anything but* to become the person who fills
an employment slot. They want romance and heroics, not
boredom and a lack of realistic choices. They want possibilities,
wilderness and freedom, not security and certainty. They want
time to explore.
I know some younger men, in their early 20s, and they tell
me that they see it all falling apart. They see the national debt,
and they *know* that they will not have the chances that were
available in the '60s and '70s. The myth of armageddon is all
too believable, and I think a lot of them are just going to wait
around stoned until it comes. I don't wonder at all about the
suicide statistics. I *know* why it is happening. They feel
their future has been ripped off. And it has been.
Alan.
|
721.3 | Where is MY hammer? | AQUA::WALKER | | Fri Feb 12 1988 11:39 | 23 |
| I am the parent of a 16 year old boy. My husband died when my son
was 3 1/2. Raising my son has had many challenges - that's good.
I have tried to point out to him that he is capable of many things
among them cooking, cleaning, laundering, shopping, anything
mechanical, problem solving, earning money, studying and that he
has and is still developing good decision making skills. He has
been working after school for the past year and just recently bought
his first car which he maintains entirely by himself. He is
maintaining good grades at the school of his choice. He enjoys
people a great deal and has a good sense of humor. I continue to
tell him that if he has a problem that he can't solve I'd be glad
to help him or find someone else who can help him solve the problem.
I guess what I want to say is to raise a liberated boy is to give
him the idea that he can be self reliant yet enlist the help of
others when necessary, that he can be very dependable but also flexible
enough to change directions if that is right for him - that he will
make his life what he wants it to be - for him.
Hopefully teaching him that his help has always been needed to keep
our household running smoothly will be a tool that he will be helpful
to him. When he brings in the wood I will keep the fire going all
day and night.
|
721.4 | But I was always terrified about nuclear war, even way bakc then! | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Fri Feb 12 1988 13:38 | 24 |
| Bonnie, I'd blame your daughter if she let herself get so dependent.
(But you know me!)
But other people would blame her too, but for different reasons.
They'd blame her for not being able to maintain a marriage, for
being a bad wife, or for poor housekeeping.
It sounds to me like somebody's pushing her friend too hard.
Everybody raise your hand if you're a failed astronaut like me,
or you haven't had a one-woman show in a fancy London art gallery,
or you haven't had your epic published and on the NYT Best Sellers
list, or you haven't made your first million yet. If he's having
trouble with his parents, then it's probably them who've been doing
the pushing, or at least for some reason he feels he can't talk
to them. Worries about failing in life are common to teenagers--do
adults forget this? I suspect it's due somewhat to the big changes
of leaving school, having responsibilities, and making decisions
(and also due to all those other things adolescence brings);
school trains you to be a quiet little obediant rat, which isn't
any help. I had some horrible failure fears and my parents were
very understanding.
Bonnie, you'll probably do fine. But watch it--don't heap on the
expectations. Being the youngest in the family is hard enough.
|
721.5 | GIrls have more options then boys | CVG::THOMPSON | Famous Ex-Noter | Sat Feb 13 1988 19:59 | 45 |
| "Stop the world, I want to get off" That's how a lot of boys (and
not a few men) often feel. I know I did. I had only one option.
Work for a living and support a family (even a family of one still
has to be supported.) I had no role models of men who stayed home
while a wife supported them.
Yes I had a role model of a father who raised 4 kids alone (from
the time I was 10 and the youngest was 4) but he still had to work
to support us all. All girls grow up 'knowing' that they have a
second option; housewife. Now I know that the reality is often
quite different then the perception but count the number of women
you know who don't work outside the house (but whose husbands do)
and compare it with the number of men you know (who don't work
outside the house) whose wife works. Also compare what people say about
those men with what they say about those women.
I'd rather be a house husband. There was a time when my wife and
I had to pick one of us to work and the other to take care of our
son. I lost; she got to stay home. IN hind sight, I have to admit
that it was better for my son because I lack patience. I think we
would have made out better financially the other way around but you
do what's best for the child. It's hard to admit that you're not a
house husband because you can't do the job well enough but I had
no preparation for that job. My wife (and most women) did.
My son is good with younger kids. He has more patience then I as
well. I hope we can teach him the things he needs to raise a family
as well as we teach him to make it outside the home. Society is
not helping though. No one tells a boy that that is an option but
girls are told so (seen TV lately?) regularly. Girls are trained
for it (if only indirectly). Most boys are kept from it. Cooking,
cleaning, laundry, shopping are all the easy parts (Even I can
do them). It's learning to have patience with kids and how to find
happiness in the non-competitive world of housekeeping that boys
are not prepared for. Boys are taught that they can't handle the
job of house husband. Most of them believe it and the prophesy is
fulfilled.
BTW, I know a man who is great with his kids (better then his wife
as far as I can tell). He's also better with housekeeping. He's
almost unskilled while his wife is a degreed Registered Nurse. You
tell me why his wife will not let him stay home while she goes to
work. Somehow I don't think it's the money. He's making $10k and
most nurses make twice that.
Alfred
|
721.6 | From my side of the fence, I'm happy where I am | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Mon Feb 15 1988 06:35 | 27 |
|
I am 24, and a woman, and I must admit I feel that in some ways
I do have more options than most men. I am enjoying working, and
feel that work is very good for giving you self esteem, however
I would like kids in a few years time, and although I don't think
I would like to be a full time housewife ( well at least not for
more than ayear or two perhaps ) I think it would be great to work
part time, or use the time to start in a different direction, or
if I really wanted to continue my career I could find a nanny, or...
I do feel that I have so many choices, so maqny ways of doing different
things. I feel that my criteria for success doesn't have to be success
in a wordly sense. I feel lucky to be a woman. I guess I am lucky,
being a woman has never given me any real problems, I've done well
at school etc, I'm enjoying my job.
I do feel that in some ways (but not all) men do have a rougher
time, its a combination of whats expected of them, and what they've
learnt to expect of themselves I suppose. However I do think that
its a matter of attitude, and some of the suggestions that have
been made about how to encourage boys to not *only* see 1 route to
"success" are great.
This is probably a rather woffly note I'm afraid, its just that
I wanted to say what it's like to be a young woman with lots of
choices, and to sympathize with men if they feel they haven't.
|
721.7 | Virginia Slims is WRONG?!?!?!? | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:28 | 35 |
| Gee, this is kind of a depressing note. How far have we *really*
come in the last 20 years?
Raising kids is so tough. (one of the reasons I don't want to
do it, I guess. tho' there *are* others...) I've seen so many
of my contemporaries who were very feminist-oriented marry into
a fairly equal relationship, and yet when the kids come along...
somehow it seems too difficult to "buck the tide". To raise them
SO UNCONVENTIONALLY that the boys would include home-making as an
option.
This is one of the most insidious outcomes of sexism. IT goes back
to the old "traditionally" female things,ideas,etc. are valued less
than traditionally male "Stuff". You can bet any amount you want
than what's running through the minds of many parents is "God, how
can I allow Julius to voice the idea that he might like to be a
home-maker?? Why, people might think he's a <gasp> f*gg*t!"
The leap in logic required to make that statement is lost, of course.
The big issue here is that boys who have non-traditional ideas can
be accused of homosexuality. And what's funny is that homosexuality
per se has nothing to do with it - the ROOT of the whole deal is
sexism pure and simple. So-called "masculine" behaviours are valued;
so-called "feminine" behaviours are not.
Until we can raise kids who have the chutzpah to say. "Yep. That's
what I want to do. So what?" we will fight this battle.
And make matters worse, we have to have TEENAGERS (those peer-pressured
hormone-ridden wonders) who can do it. I think the trick may be
that the parents are "true-believers" and can impress the kids with
that, but it ain't gonna be easy...
--DE
|
721.8 | | SEDJAR::THIBAULT | Storybook ending in progress | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:36 | 18 |
| re: < Note 721.5 by CVG::THOMPSON "Famous Ex-Noter" >
-< GIrls have more options then boys >-
� All girls grow up 'knowing' that they have a
� second option; housewife.
Well, that's not entirely true. Even tho' my mother stayed home while
us kids were in school, it was expected that I would go to college, get
educated, get a good job and support myself the same as my brothers. It
never occured to me that I didn't have to do any of that, and that I could
be a housewife. I always felt (and still do) that it was up to me to make
sure I could get by. Now that we're a two-income family I still have a hard
time adjusting to the fact that the burden of household expenses are not
just my responsibility. If I were to have kids (which I don't want), I would
not want to stay home with them. But if I did have them and they were girls
I would raise them the same as I was raised...that is to be independant.
Jenna
|
721.9 | it is progress, of a sort | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:43 | 26 |
| re: .7
I think you've put your finger on something here, Dawn.
I've seen a lot of examples lately of people who seem to value
"liberated women", but in every single case it was a woman who has
adopted a certain number of masculine behaviors. That's the same kind
of progress Virginia Slims is talking about -- we've come a long way,
we now have the right to smoke the same as men. But do men have the
right to drink herbal teas in restaurants without getting funny looks?
No way.
The definition of 'masculine' has been modified to allow a certain
amount of expressiveness and consideration on the man's part --
but only if he and everybody else is certain he could fall back
onto the old macho model if that were necessary. If anything, the
definition of masculinity is more rigid than before.
As you say, feminine behavior is still denigrated, no matter which
sex displays it.
I'll be an optimist here, though, and say that having masculine
behavior in women is a major step forward. Now we start working
on getting feminine behavior valued no matter who displays it.
--bonnie
|
721.10 | who wrote the Book of Gender Roles | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Feb 15 1988 13:21 | 17 |
| I always knew I could never be a house-spouse. I remember in primary
school being asked in an assignment to say what I wanted to be...and
remembering that all the things we'd seen and been told about only
boys could be and I was supposed to say I wanted to be a mommy (even
though not once had we been shown how wonderful it was to be a mommy,
only how wonderful to be a fireman etc)...I got real panicky and
felt I was trapped into lying.
But anyway, what's all this dumping on homosexuals.
I'm probably overly urban, but I have plenty of friends who have
long hair or long beards or short hair or are fathers (or some
combination) and there's never been any problem with ordering herbal
tea in Boston or Cambridge or San Francisco or Seattle. At least
there's been some progress--men can carry their kids around at the
zoo or the supermarket and not get "hen-pecked" whispered about
them nowadays, yes?
|
721.11 | Cambridge and SF aren't the rest of the country | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Feb 15 1988 15:12 | 38 |
| re: .10
I'm glad you've found a more open segment of society that you can
move in. Up until we moved to New Hampshire, I shared your optimism
about openness and changes in sex/gender roles. I thought that
seeing men in the park with babies on their backs meant that some
great social changes were under way.
But then I moved to New Hampshire, where it's still not expected
that daughters will go to college.
Then I realized that Nashua is one of the more liberal places in New
Hampshire, and that Nashua has a lot in common with a lot of smaller
places, non-urban places. I talk to friends who live all over the
country, once ambitious friends who were going to change the world, and
I find that they can't imagine why I wouldn't want to stay home with my
kids while they're little. "They're small for such a short time and
then they're gone. How can you prefer to work?"
Sound like something your mother told you? Or you read in Betty
Freidan? I heard it just before Christmas from a ten-year veteran of
high tech, a technical project leader with a master's degree in
computer science. She just left her job with no plans of returning
for at least six years.
I realized that a lot of those men with the babies on their backs are
at work some 60 hours a week (including commuting time) and see their
kids on weekends, just like a lot of our fathers did 30 years ago.
Department of Labor statistics for last year said that mothers who work
outside the home do *more* hours of housework than mothers who stay at
home. (These numbers were printed in the papers just before
Christmas.)
Things may be cool in Cambridge, but the sticks ain't heard the
news.
--bonnie
|
721.12 | perhaps this isn't quite what you meant, but... | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Tue Feb 16 1988 06:34 | 16 |
|
re .11
Perhaps its so difficult to change things because even the more
`liberated' people have a tendency to emphasize traditional `masculine'
values, for example Bonnie, you've just mentioned your friend with
ajob whose going to quit for 6 years. Presuming she has made that
decision herself, and has not been pressurized into it, isn't that
good ? Here is a woman who has the *choice* whether to stay at work
or to stop if she wants. Surely that's what feminism is all about?
The implication in your note is that you think its a shame that
she's stopping work, and hence aren't your putting a greater value
on work than raising kids ? If we can't think that raising kids
is something to be proud of, then we're not going to be able to
bring up our boys to think that way are we ?
|
721.13 | wrong to work? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Feb 16 1988 08:32 | 51 |
| Yes, you definitely misunderstood my point. I don't claim to be fully
liberated -- I am a child of my society, for better or worse, and I
expect to be fighting for my own integrity until the day I die.
But what my friend told me was that that I was *WRONG TO PREFER TO
WORK* rather than staying home with my preschooler. Maybe I didn't say
that clearly enough before.
She told me in so many words that she couldn't understand how I could
do it, that raising children was so rewarding she couldn't see how
anyone could prefer to work rather than spend all day every day with
the kids.
If being told by one of your oldest friends, one who was a role
model to you when you were thinking about giving up the whole quest
to make something of yourself, that what you have chosen to do makes
you an unsympathetic person and a bad mother, isn't pressure to
stay home, then I don't know what is.
I don't know what forms of pressure Sherry went through, but she
didn't admit them. She says things like "As soon as I held my daughter
in my arms, I knew this was what I was meant to do." And, "I can't
imagine how you can leave Steven with a stranger all day, not knowing
what they're doing to him."
The idea of individual choice is nice, but had you noticed how dozens
and then thousands of free choices add up to a whopping trend of
professional women giving up their careers to have babies? They're
giving them up later and after more accomplishments than our mothers
did, and they talk a lot about choice, but they're doing the same
thing.
I noticed a very small scale example of this in last Friday's snowstomr
that closed schools in Nashua. I had suspected that might happen and
brought home some work that I could do at home, but Neil had to go in
for an important meeting, so I stayed home with the kids. Another day,
we might have decided the other way.
Well, of the eight immediate neighbors with kids, every one of them had
the MOTHER home. I wasn't able to talk with everybody while we
were shoveling sidewalks, but the neighbor to the right stayed home
for the same reason I did -- she had reading she could do at home,
he had a meeting. The neighbor across the street stayed home because
her job offers unlimited weather days while his job makes him take
a vacation day if the plant isn't officially closed.
All good rational hard-to-argue-with reasons. But isn't it funny
that all of us decided that the woman's work was, on this particular
day, less important?
--bonnie
|
721.14 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Feb 16 1988 09:32 | 25 |
| Bonnie, re. your friend who prefers to stay home...
I respect women who choose to stay home, and think that that should be
a valid, well-respected and economically viable choice for any parent
(m or f) who wants to do so. I also find myself hoping that they
have some career skills and plans for the time when the children
no longer need them so intensively.
But occasionally I have run across some people (mostly women) who
are so defensive and self-righteous about staying at home that I
end up wondering who they are preaching to. I usually say quietly
that it sounds like the right choice for *them* and they often counter
with something to the effect that I don't understand, that all women
should think as they do. The last time this happened I ended up
feeling that it sounded a lot like 'sour grapes' rolled up with
a major dose of fear. It must hurt a lot if you love your child
and choose to/have to work and be given the message that you're
somehow a 2nd rate parent for that.
It would not be right for me to stay home if I were a parent, and
it certainly wouldn't do the child much good to have an irritable,
frustrated, burned-out mother around hour after hour. I'm very
glad I don't have to make the choice.
Holly
|
721.15 | Valid Individual Choices may show Trends | YODA::BARANSKI | The Mouse Police never sleeps! | Tue Feb 16 1988 15:19 | 37 |
| RE: .13 Bonnie Randall
"I don't know what forms of pressure Sherry went through, but she didn't admit
them. She says things like "As soon as I held my daughter in my arms, I knew
this was what I was meant to do." And, "I can't imagine how you can leave
Steven with a stranger all day, not knowing what they're doing to him.""
Why do you think there is pressure? I think that both of these statements are
perfectly reasonable, saying that she wants to be with her daughter, and saying
that she does not understand you. You said earlier that she said that you were
wrong to prefer work. That may be (I don't know). But in the same sort of
attitude you seem to say that it is wrong for her to prefer to stay home. How do
you reconcil that apparent contradiction?
RE: all mother's staying home
You know, it *could* just be that individual unbaised decisions might show a
trend for perfectly good reasons. It *could* be that a sizable proportion of
women feel best staying home, or being able to stay home.
RE: what work is important
Here is one point where it may be a matter of tradeoff's rather then
discrimination. The men *choose* jobs where their job depends on them being
there. The women *choose* jobs which, although lower paying (apparent
discrimination), has more fringe benifits (being able to work at home, snow
days, etc...)
Now I don't feel discriminated against compared to VMS developers; it's simply a
fact that my job is less demanding, my pay maybe less, but that's my choice not
to be in a demanding job.
You see the viewpoint that the women's work is not judged as important. I see
the viepoint that the women's work is more flexible, and the men's work is more
demanding. I see that the men has less choices then the women.
Jim
|
721.17 | I can't believe I'm hearing this | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Feb 17 1988 08:22 | 24 |
| Re: several
Are you guys listening to yourselves? Are you really listening
to what you're saying?
If I put in a note that said, "My mother told me yesterday that
she can't imagine how I can leave Steven with strangers all day
not knowing what they're doing to him," you'd all nod and say yes,
that's the kind of old-fashioned sexism we have to learn to free
ourselves from. (My mother did tell me something remarkably similar,
by the way.)
If I said, "My boss told me he can't imagine how I can leave Steven
with strangers all day not knowing what they're doing to him," you'd
be screaming for his blood for implying that women should be in
the home.
But let the same thing be said by a woman in high-tech job, and
you're all insisting that she didn't intend to be critical when
she says my action is so far out of range of her value system that
she can't even imagine how I can feel this way. All of a sudden
it's advocating free choice instead of maintaining sexism.
--bonnie
|
721.18 | I'm sorry | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Wed Feb 17 1988 09:09 | 5 |
| Bonnie,
.16 looked a lot nastier than I meant. I'm very sorry to have posted
it; please except my apologies. I won't further entangle things
by trying to explain what I meant, because, well, I'm not quite
sure.
|
721.19 | a misunderstanding? | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Wed Feb 17 1988 09:19 | 4 |
| Bonnie, I support your choice. I think the use of the word
"strangers" is, at least unconsciously, a move to make you feel
guilty and to imply you haven't thought through your decision--
and I don't care who says it, that's what I consider it.
|
721.20 | drawing a fine line... | YODA::BARANSKI | The Mouse Police never sleeps! | Wed Feb 17 1988 09:25 | 10 |
| RE: .17
"All of a sudden it's advocating free choice instead of maintaining sexism."
*shrug* It's a fine line between them... What do you do when free choice
maintains sexism? Education?
Please Bonnie, no offense intended...
Jim.
|
721.21 | My view on your view on her view on... | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Wed Feb 17 1988 09:31 | 22 |
|
re 12 & 17
Ok Bonnie I understand you now ! Iknow the feeling, I had a friend
from school who was one of two girls in a boys' school, who went
there because she wanted to study engineering, she then went on
to do a degree and is now working as an engineer. But I will never
forget the time that she ventured the opinion that she thought it
might be an idea if all married women gave up work as it would solve
the unemployment problem in the UK. I couldn't believe I was hearing
right ! (Incidentally, she is married now and still working as far
as I know - perhaps she's changed her ideas since then !)
But the point I was trying to make was that i got the impression
(wrongly it seems) that you were saying that her point of view was
wrong, not that she couldn't see your point of view. Now I understand
(and if you can understand that last sentence, congratulations.
The problem with noting rather than talking is its so explain exactly
what you mean.)
Sarah.
|
721.22 | still friends | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Feb 17 1988 09:33 | 26 |
| re: .18 -- apology accepted, there was no offense taken in the first
place. I've been guilty of some overstatement here myself.
When feelings are strong, sometimes the words get strong too. I think
that's a legitimate feeling, but sometimes women are afraid to express
themselves strongly for fear of seeming -- I don't know, unladylike I
suppose. I think that as long as our feelings and thoughts are
honestly and fairly expressed, we can disagree strongly without
taking or giving offense.
If we don't argue our strongly felt beliefs, we'll never see each
other's point of view.
re: .19
I'm certainly willing to admit that I'm reacting so strongly to
Sherry's pressure because I feel threatened by it. And I do feel
guilty that I can't get off on mothering the way she does. I love my
kids, but . . .
But I'm worried by this new return to the home. Millions of women it
seems are dashing back to motherhood and homemaking, the same way they
did in the fifties. I don't think too many of the women who stayed
home then were consciously, specifically pushed, either.
--bonnie
|
721.23 | Thankful Moderator Response | VIKING::TARBET | Clorty Auld Besom | Wed Feb 17 1988 12:44 | 4 |
| Bless you all (Bonnie, Lisa, Sarah, and who did I miss?) for reserving
the heat for the topic rather than one another!
=maggie
|
721.24 | A little flame | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Wed Feb 17 1988 18:06 | 18 |
| Why is it that women with careers who choice to stay home with
their children represent "good mothering" and single parents
who are forced to leave their children at daycare so they can
get off of welfare represent "those leaches on society who
take all our tax money to support their kids and don't bring
them up right anyway because they (the mothers) aren't there
when their kids need them."
This is a thought that has come back to me after reading
this string of notes - it is not to say that anyone stated
the above in any of those notes.
_peggy
(-)
|
A single mother who would have loved
to have had a choice - but didn't.
|
721.25 | | COLORS::TARBET | Clorty Auld Besom | Wed Feb 17 1988 21:03 | 8 |
| You're right Peggy (and whoever else said much the same thing, I
forget). There is a definite Catch22 around all of this because
of the *^#$%@^# paradigm change we've been struggling with for the
last 20-odd years. For parents ...women and men, but especially
women... there just is no universally-accepted Correct Solution.
It's positively crazy-making.
=maggie
|
721.26 | the subtle effects of deficit spending | HEFTY::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Thu Feb 18 1988 07:06 | 10 |
| Sort of makes a good case for traditional families, where Dad worked,
Mom stayed home with the kids, everybody knew their roles. But,
back then, mortgages were at 3-4% and inflation was nil. Today,
the $100,000 houses and 12% mortgages make two incomes a necessity.
And if you're a single parent, plan on pissing away money on rent
for ever and always. 20 % down ? $1000 a month ?!
I was raised in one of those traditional families. It bothers me
to see women I work with take three months off to have a baby, and
then back to work. I understand it, but I don't have to like it.
|
721.27 | | VINO::EVANS | | Thu Feb 18 1988 12:35 | 18 |
| Gee, Dana won't it be great when Mom can take 3 months off, go back
to work, and then Dad can take a few months off to be with the baby?
I get absolutely irate when people start dumping on working moms
and tlaking about how screwed-up "latch-key" kids are (supposed
to be). *I* was a g*dd*mn latch-key kid, and I'm pretty darn OK.
The thing is, there was a standard of behaviour I was supposed to
adhere to, and if I didn't....WATCH OUT!
I'm not so troubled by working moms as I am by the epidemic of parents
who are abdicating the upbringing of their children, regardless
of whether they're home or not. IF mom or dad is home, but never
spends the effort to *raise* the child, the kid is WORSE OFF
than the "latch-key" kid whose parents spend the time they have
with the kids actually *raising* them.
--DE
|
721.28 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Thu Feb 18 1988 13:03 | 5 |
| Dawn, my criticism was directed towards the economy, and not to
the people whose choices are limited thereby. Sorry if that wasn't
clear.
Dana
|
721.29 | | VINO::EVANS | | Thu Feb 18 1988 15:42 | 10 |
| Right, Dana - I understood that. I just wanted to be sure we don't
limit Dads from staying with the kids, too. Maybe if we don't limit
our thinking, we can come up with creative ways to have families
that don't have to adhere to the old patterns, which had their
limitations as well. Given the subject of this note, I think we
need to create situations that allow Dads to be home with the kids
if they want to. Or if mom wants to work full-time.
--DE
|
721.30 | 1 parent doesn't *have* to stay home | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Thu Feb 18 1988 16:10 | 3 |
| And it should be ok if both Mom and Dad *want* to both work
whether they need to (financially) or not. It does *not*
mean they are bad parents either.
|
721.31 | MDR/QT | ULTRA::LARU | we are all together | Thu Feb 18 1988 16:35 | 4 |
| re .30...
Right! ... just as long as they get in their Minimum Daily Requirements
of Quality Time!
|
721.32 | This is Progress! | AQUA::WALKER | | Thu Feb 18 1988 16:37 | 5 |
| I was very disappointed when Reagan decided aid to education was
out for me. Being a single parent/widow at age 30 I was interested
in getting an education in order to go beyond being "just a secretary."
Until Reagan changed Federal Aid to Education I was going to college
nights and had accumulated 60 of the needed 120 credits to graduate!
|
721.33 | what a drag | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Feb 19 1988 11:25 | 8 |
| RE: .32
Well, he *promised* to get government out of your life!
:-{
--DE
|
721.34 | | 19358::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Fri Feb 19 1988 11:58 | 3 |
| RE .32 What about DEC ? Or are you a contract employee ? Permanent
employees can get tuition refunded.
|
721.35 | not encouraging | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Feb 19 1988 12:08 | 27 |
| Back on the subject of raising liberated boys:
I am not terribly encouraged by what I hear.
Teach him to cook, help build his self-esteem, teach him that not
all girls wearing pink are Barbi dolls and not all boys wearing
pink are unmanly. All good advice, but not significantly more
egalitarian than Neil's 80-year-old father.
I hear that society still expects him to be the primary breadwinner,
though he can at least expect the woman to help out "if necessary." I
suppose that's better than some of our fathers had, when the wives
really couldn't help out at all, but it's still not shared
responsibility.
I don't hear that a more open definition of masculinity has replaced
the one we grew up with. Indeed, it appears that things like being
a good cook have been added onto the old rigid role, making it even
harder than before for a boy to live up to.
I hear a lot of statements of the way things "should" be -- things
I agree with, things that are good.
Unfortunately things are not the way they should be. How do we
get from here to there?
--bonnie
|
721.36 | possessing and living them | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Fri Feb 19 1988 13:07 | 3 |
| re .35 Values.
Russell
|
721.37 | elaborate, please? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Feb 19 1988 13:25 | 16 |
| re: .36
Everybody has values and lives by them, whether they're conscious of
them or not. And sometimes people think they're valuing one thing when
their actions speak otherwise.
The values that society values (arrggh, what a phrase :)) are not
the same as the values that I would like my children to have.
I try to live my life as an example of what I believe, and I'm sure
that will be a strong influence on my son's life.
But there are a lot of other people and forces telling him that
what I believe in is wrong. How do I counteract that?
--bonnie
|
721.38 | I guess, communicate as well as show | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Feb 19 1988 19:18 | 12 |
| RE: .37
Maybe explaining to him why you think other values are wrong will
help. When something happens (in a TV show, in life) that shows
these other values you could try and point it out. For instance, if
you see an ad that shows men being incompetant at a traditional
"female" task, you could point out how ridiculous that is.
But bottom line, he'll eventually start deciding his own values and
there's very little you can do then.
..Karen
|
721.39 | a couple of random ideas | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Feb 22 1988 16:05 | 14 |
| Or make sure either he's good at traditionally "female" tasks or
knows adult men who are.
Or make sure it's not always you who stays home on snow or sick
days. (After all, what's more important: work or kid.)
Get in tv shows that show all people can do all things. I'm not
home much, but I've had a couple of sick days recently and I think
--who could be more homey than Mr. Rogers?
--MathNet (on Square 1 TV) is a riot!
I don't know any kid-appropriate readings, but Garp was a house-dad.
|
721.40 | | WAV12::GOLDBERG | Linda Goldberg | Mon Feb 22 1988 17:10 | 14 |
| RE: 721.22 Bonnie, why are you worried by this "new return to
the home"?
I thought that was a really interesting comment because
I do feel threatened when people imply that I am not
a good mother because I work full-time, but have not
thought much about women that do stay home.
I guess I thought that was a decision that they made
believing it best for them and their family, and that
it is nice if you can have choices.
|
721.41 | a few questions | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Mon Feb 22 1988 23:25 | 4 |
| re .37 How old is your child? What has he learned from the
Family? Life experiences and books read also.
Russ
|
721.42 | not to be picky, but... | MSD36::STHILAIRE | Happiness is Springsteen tix | Tue Feb 23 1988 11:24 | 7 |
| re .34, I'm under the impression that DEC employees can get tuition
refunded (or advances) only if the course is "job related." Depending
on what a person's job is, and what they want to study, they wouldn't
necessarily be able to get help from DEC.
Lorna
|
721.43 | most courses will be reimbursed | FRSBEE::GIUNTA | | Wed Feb 24 1988 07:50 | 13 |
| re .42
Digital reimburses tuition for courses that are job required and
career related. With job required, they also pay for all books
and other fees and the reimbursement is non-taxable per the IRS
rules. With career related, Digital pays all tuition but only 75%
of books and I believe starting in 1988 that these reimbursements
are now taxable income per the IRS rules. Career related is a very
broad category and typically any degreed program qualifies as career
related even though it may not be useful in your present job. See
Personnel P&P 4.13 for all the details.
Cathy
|
721.44 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:25 | 7 |
| Re .43
There is some hope that congress will go back to allowing
the tax deduction for tuition reimbursement for courses that aren't
related to one's current job. According to a story in this morning's
paper, there are a jillion sponsers already for a bill to do this.
|
721.45 | Great topic! It makes the head spin. | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Feb 25 1988 18:50 | 75 |
| As many of you will have inferered from my notes I'm not as
concerned with sexism _per_se_ as with the general class of
problems that center around the fact that we allow expectations
and esxternalities run our lives more than the realities of who
and what we are. Sexism is, it seems to me, just one of a number
of ways in which people are straight-jacketed by things that
oughtn't to be important.
In many ways, I think we're better off on that score today than
we were a few decades back, but it is really hard to judge. I
see encouraging signs all around, but I also see the same old BS
hanging around long after it should have dried up and blown
away. On the positive side, as I wander around it seems to me
that there is a lot more variety of appearences amongst the
populace than there used to be. Likewise there's more variety in
living and working arrangements. On the other hand, I still get
"Get a hair cut!" yelled at me from the windows of passing cars,
and when I tell my boss that I have to do such and so because I
consider it necessary to being a good parent I still get this "I
never did that. Are you saying that I was a bad father?" reply.
So how do I teach my boys that they should be whatever it is
that they are, that they should pick their principles and live
by them even if they aren't the ones generally accepted? How do
I at the same time explain to them the weird beliefs that are so
prevalent in our society--explain them without advocating them?
It's very hard.
I try to do more of the parenting, but at the same time, my wife
does stay home with the kids. We do have very much the 1 bread-
winner, 1 house-wife, 3 children (2.4 was hard to do so we
rounded up), 2 cars, house in th suburbs household. It's hard
after a standard workaholic engineer's day to come home and
really carry your weight as a parent. Selma by being there all
day and all night is just more obviously the parent.
I do take off the first day of each month and spend it with the
kids, even if I have work things that conflict (unless they want
to do something that can't be done on the day of the week that
the first falls on). I did care for the first boy on a real
50/50 basis when sSelma was working. I do buy the boys dolls and
"girl toys" when they want them. But you do have to explain to
them that some people think that they are just for girls. If you
don't, they're taken by surprise when their school-mates start
teasing them about it. But have you ever tried to tell a 5
year-old what "some people think" without advocating it? Kids
don't understand why someone would want to believe something
that's wrong.
In the end all you can do is be very firm anbout living your
life with integrety and being who you are, whether that matches
the "normal" mold or the "liberated" one. You can try to explain
everything to the kids and be open and honest about what you
believe in and why and how that differes from other people. You
can show them and give them love that is really unconditional,
and make sure that they know that they don't have to match some
image to be loved, that they can be them, and it's OK.
I tried in this conference several months back to convince
people that you could love, respect and support someone whose
moral decisions you disagreed with or at least didn't fully
accept. I didn't fare too well. Disgreement is so often taken as
attack that it is hard to be honest, disagree and supportive all
at once. I can only hope that over the years, and starting early
enough I can convince my boys of what I didn't manage to convey
here.
Anyway, it's very hard. Being a liberated male chauvanist pig, a
workaholic full-time parent, a conservative hippy, a na�ve
curmudgeon and all of the other contradictions you can come up
with if you mix and match, choosing what feels right to you
rather than just accepting a ready-made role, can drive you
crazy.
JimB.
|
721.46 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Feb 25 1988 19:08 | 5 |
| Re: .45
What a nice note to find in this conference. Three cheers for you.
|
721.47 | reasons I'm worried | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Feb 29 1988 15:56 | 34 |
| re: .40
Linda --
I'm worried for two main reasons.
The obvious one is that many of the stay-at-home mothers have made it
quite plain that they don't consider my decision to work while my
children are young to be a valid one. I'm worried that the right to
work and to take care of myself, which I've fought all my life to
establish, is disappearing and my daughter is going to have to start
the fight all over again from scratch, my son is going to grow up
taking women less seriously even as so many of the boys I went to
school with took women less seriously.
The other thing that worries me is that many of these women (by no
means all of them) don't appear to have chosen to stay home for good
and healthy reasons, like wanting to enjoy their children, but rather
to have retreated into motherhood as a way to avoid continuing to face
the responsibilities of the workaday world. These women are often the
most virulent about women who work -- they seem to feel that my working
threatens their right to stay home.
I suppose I tend to feel the reverse: their staying home threatens
my right to work.
But so many of them are saying things that are straight out of the
Feminine Mystique -- that a woman's whole worth lies in her work as a
mother. Sure, mothering is half of the most important job in the world
(the other half is fathering, not in the biological sense), but it's
not the only important job in the world and it doesn't mean that women
who aren't mothers are inferior!
--bonnie
|
721.48 | | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Tue Mar 01 1988 12:27 | 23 |
|
re .47> Bonnie, I think you've put your finger on something when
you mentioned women staying at home to escape the working world.
I've thought for some time that it would be nice, in a few years
to have kids and work part time, perhaps start on something new,
using the break. It's only recently ( since I've been reading this
particular topic which has made me think about all this quite a
lot) that I've realised that the bit that appeals at the moment
is the idea of having a break from work, rather than looking after
the kids ! It's amazing what you can find out about yourself when
you really start examining your motives!
On another note, I got into a discussion about Nannies with my SO
last night. He was putting forward the view that if people actually
worked out how much it would cost them to give up work to look after
the kids vs the cost of a nanny, perhaps it would put a different
light on the matter. I'd always thought that by the time youd paid
a nanny, + her taxes, food etc etc it would be quite expensive.
It was but not as much as I thought. (We based our calculations
on a friend that is a fully qualified nanny.)
|
721.49 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Tue Mar 01 1988 15:04 | 20 |
721.50 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Tue Mar 01 1988 15:07 | 9 |
|
whoops. I've hidden my .49
It must be a bad day, or something.
Anyway, I'll keep it hidden till I've read the string of replies and
decided if it's really appropriate...
/. Ian .\
|
721.51 | Liberated men - a new hope | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Thu Mar 03 1988 19:31 | 38 |
|
Fantastic topic! After listening to many people in this conference
say that they did not want to hear about men's problems with sexism
I have hesitated to say anything along these lines myself. I am
truly thrilled that so many people find this topic worthy of discussion.
> She said, "If I don't make it as a musician or a pilot, I can always
> be a housewife. If he doesn't make it, he doesn't have anything."
I've never heard it said better.
One of the problems that you will run into when raising liberated
boys is that he can't escape from the "must succeed" trap unless
there truly are alternatives. He not only needs to be able to
take on the woman's role in terms of skills, he must also see that
there are woman out there that will be willing to take on the provider
role. The WHOLE provider role! He needs role models for his AND
her new role.
Women to quit work for a "break" or to raise their children not
only threaten other women's right to work, they also reinforce the
idea that the men must provide. Men see other men's wives dropping
out and are that much more aware that their wife might choose to
do the same. He must strive to succeed that much more to try to be able to
make the payments, that he thought would be shared, all by himself.
I would not want to grow up in these times. Men in the past only
had to compete with other men to support their families. Even though
women provide half of the support to many families, many men are
still required to be the sole support and at the same time compete
with men and women at work.
But I think I've done enough preaching of this agenda here...I think
I'll sit back and let the rest of you talk it over...and love
every minute of it!
MJC O->
|
721.52 | | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Thu Mar 03 1988 20:25 | 5 |
| Yeah, me too. And me too too, especially since when I looked around,
I saw all these women who'd worked, left school to support families,
heck, not even getting to complete elementary school because of
the need to help put food in everybody's mouth. We aren't talking
dummies here, either: we're talking hard-working, western women.
|
721.53 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Mar 03 1988 20:27 | 7 |
| I am interested to read that "women provide half the support to many
families". I am now trying to figure who it is who is supposed to have
been providing the other half of my household's income all these
years.
Karen
|
721.54 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Mar 03 1988 20:52 | 9 |
| Re: .52
Oops, mea culpa. I deleted a reply I'd written because I wanted
to make it more concise, and I deleted it right out from under
Suzanne's .52. So, I think she's referring to my muttering about
knowing from very early times that I wasn't going for a life as
part of a "nuclear family". Not until the sun turns into a cinder,
I said.
|
721.55 | You can stop trying | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Mar 04 1988 08:57 | 3 |
| Re: .53
That's why the word "many" is used instead of the word "all".
|
721.56 | sigh | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:09 | 22 |
| I hope this isn't a rathole, but I'd like to address this from another
side. I was struck, in the re-quoting of it, by the statement that
the young woman made:
"If I don't make it as a musician or a pilot I can always
be a housewife"
The *demeaning* of the role of housewife in this statement apalls
me. If young women feel this way about that role, no wonder young
MEN can't grow up wanting to do it!
THis is an attitude that is often *WRONGLY* attributed to feminist
thinking. In reality, I believe it is NON-feminist thinking - it
SO VERY CONCISELY puts down the role of home maker. And I'm sure
this young woman was simply stating her feelings.
This is 1988, and young women still see traditional women's roles
as devalued and DEVALUING. The *focus* has shifted, but the bottom
line still appears to be: male-centered=good female-centered=bad.
--DE
|
721.57 | Perhaps She Meant It As A "Safety-Net" | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:37 | 11 |
| RE: .56
Dawn, I'm not sure if I interpret the young woman's comment to
mean that she feels being a housewife is demeaning.
Perhaps she was trying to verbalize that she, a female, felt she
had a "safety-net" upon which she could, if need be, rely - a choice
(full time house-husband) that she did not see available to her
male friend.
Alan
|
721.58 | on the value of "Women's Work" | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:39 | 4 |
|
Ah, Yes, Dawn. That's it exactly.
Justine
|
721.59 | I say "yes, but" a lot | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:49 | 44 |
| re: .56
Dawn, if this is a rathole, it's a good one and I'll go down
it with you.
<<< generalization warning: I'm talking about social trends
from here on, and social trends are by definition generalizations
that don't apply to everybody. >>>
You're certainly right about the devaluing of the role of
'housewife' and the approval accorded to many traditionally
masculine behaviors.
I'm not sure about your summary, though. You said, if I read you
correctly, that society desires and approves that which is
man-centered while woman-centered is to be avoided.
It seems that what is being devalued is the whole nurturing
side of humanity. Aggression, competition, achievement are
desirable; warmth, compassion, giving aren't.
Popluar self-help books have a depressingly uniform theme: don't
give to anybody else unless you're sure you're getting yours.
Look out for number one. And it's true that if you aren't taking
care of yourself, you can't take care of other people. But what
happened to generosity in love? To forgiving?
It's not good to be a nurse, a schoolteacher, a daycare worker, a
secretary, an administrative assistant. It is good to be a pilot,
a business executive, anyone on the fast track.
There seems to be a trend to look askance at even ordinary
jobs that don't involve competition, jobs that are satisfying
in their own right because of the mastery involved. Friends
of Neil's parents have asked when he's going to stop being
just an engineer and get a promotion to management. It's not
enough that he's good at designing software and enjoys doing
it. He's got to be advancing.
I don't see this as an issue as simple as sexism. It may find
its primary expression in sexism, but I think it goes a lot
deeper into society than just the roles of men and women.
--bonnie
|
721.60 | Down the rathole together! | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:30 | 22 |
| Ahhh, Bonnie. What I would say in reply (well, what I AM saying
in reply, eh? ;-) ) is that the values around "nuturing" are
very much PERCIEVED by society as "female" and the agression, etc.
are very much PERCIEVED by society as "male"...traits.
Nuturing jobs are devauled because they've traditionally been done
by WOMEN! There have been studies done which showed that assertiveness
is viewed as a POSITIVE trait. OK. BUt then we get to PART II of
the study which shows a WOMAN being assertive. Whoops! Now it's
a NEGATIVE trait! SOMEONE in this conference has quoted (*much*
better than I) this study, so perhaps they can clarify...
In a patriarchial (is this term passe'?) society, agressiveness,
force, etc. are valued because the male traits are more valued.
And males who do not conform to the mold of those traits are very
much DE-valued.
Maybe we're in violent agreement here, but I think the root of the
problem is still sexism.
--DE
|
721.61 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:56 | 11 |
| Re: many/all
The way the original reply read, all men are faced with the
possibility of supplying all the financial support for a household,
and many women supply part of the financial support. The rest of
the reply centered on women providing no direct financial support.
Left unacknowledged are all the women providing total financial
support for their households. Any female child who thinks that
she is not faced with this responsibility is woefully unprepared,
it seems to me.
|
721.62 | insidious lurking | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 14:46 | 12 |
| RE: .61
That's an excellent point. Isn't the largest of any group below
the poverty line Female-Head-of-Household? I believe so.
I think if we were to explore all the nooks and crannies and of
this basenote and its implications [and knowing US, we probably
will! :-)] we will find sexism and its negative effects (Affects?)
lurking everywhere.
--DE
|
721.63 | We all need role models | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Fri Mar 04 1988 19:35 | 30 |
| Re: .61 and others
> Left unacknowledged are all the women providing total financial support
> for their households.
The reason that these women were unacknowledged is that I was
addressing only the relationships in which men are directly involved
(the ones that the young boys would be looking at). Although there are
a large number of households supported by a single woman, very few of
them include an adult male. So theses households do not provide a
role model for a young man to see the option of being supported as a
house-husband.
Young boys see only two choices:
1. Support a family
2. Don't have a family (but still support himself)
These single-head-of-household families do supply a role model for a
few women. This may be part of the reason for multi-generation single
parent welfare families. If your chances of success in the world of
work are denied to you, you may choose to live off the state like your
mother did. Perhaps the single-parent families supported by successful
women will serve as the model of an alternative to welfare.
If men do get an opportunity to be supported, perhaps it will come
from women who grew up in single parent families.
MJC O->
|
721.64 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Fri Mar 04 1988 20:58 | 9 |
| re: .63
I think you have slightly missed my point. I think no one, male
or female, can grow up assuming that anyone else will provide any
of their financial support. A lot of girls do assume this, I know.
That's why they're in big trouble vocationally after a divorce or
whatever.
|
721.66 | dream on | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Fri Mar 04 1988 22:36 | 19 |
| Oh, you'd be surprised at the number of household supported solely
by a woman which include an adult male, even the ones where he doesn't
have to vacate the premises when the DSS inspector shows up.
Also, I think it might relieve the pressure, wisely or not, on young
boys to see that many families are supported by a woman. For the
closest thing, it means that if Dad disappears whatever reason,
they don't have to be the man of the family at 12 or whatever age.
If people believe in the 2-parents-2.3-kids fallacy, they're going
to get messed up no matter what. A strong woman doesn't imply that
her descendents are going to be single parents any more than a strong
man implies that his descendents are going to be single parents.
In my family, singleness wasn't by choice any more than kids having
to quit school to help out feed younger siblings was exactly by
choice. Death and illness occur anywhere. It's best we're all
prepared for it. You can't blame single mothers on their mothers.
I'd like you to reconsider your posting about "living off the state"
as being offensive and inappropriate to this notesfile.
|
721.67 | Rathole allert! | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Sat Mar 05 1988 10:24 | 38 |
| Re: .64
I didn't miss your point, I just failed to acknowledge it. I agree,
everyone should be able to support themselves.
Re: .66
> Oh, you'd be surprised at the number of household supported solely
> by a woman which include an adult male,...
Maybe, but the fact that I would be surprised is part of the problem.
These households are not visible enough to serve as role models
for young men.
> A strong woman doesn't imply that her descendants are going to be
> single parents any more than a strong man implies that his descendants
> are going to be single parents.
I disagree. The daughter of a two parent family might not see an
alternative to being dependent on a man and my stick it out in a
bad marriage. The daughter of a single mother *KNOWS* that it is
possible to raise children without a man around and is more likely
to be willing dump the bum and go it alone.
> You can't blame single mothers on their mothers.
I'm not trying to. The mothers only provide an example of an
alternative way to survive. It is the society that forces the
new mother to use that alternative.
> I'd like you to reconsider your posting about "living off the state"
> as being offensive and inappropriate to this notesfile.
I'm willing to reconsider if you find it offensive. It is not obvious
to me why you find it offensive, could you elaborate?
MJC O->
|
721.68 | I don't think MJC takes that kind of shot | VIKING::TARBET | | Sat Mar 05 1988 14:15 | 8 |
| <--(.64)
Lisa, I grew up "living off the state" (well, county) and I didn't
find anything objectionable about Mike's use of the phrase. I mean,
it does describe what y'do when all your alternatives are worse
or absent, right? (And thank goodness it's an option!)
=maggie
|
721.69 | We hold up over half the sky. | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Sat Mar 05 1988 16:14 | 14 |
|
As an ex-welfare mother - the "living off the state" comment hits
a sore spot. I personally know so many people who either live in
female headed households or were brought up in them that I can not
understand the statement that they are not visiable to the average
young male. I think that they are there but that they are considered
divient (sp?) from the norm and not discussed.
_peggy
(-)
| Support is more then providing money.
|
721.70 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Sat Mar 05 1988 17:00 | 27 |
| Re: .64
I think you're slightly missing her point. You're talking about
"should." She's talking about "is."
Re: .66
Offensive? It could be "part of the reason" for multi-generation
single parent families. Someone "may" follow the line of reasoning
she presents. No accusations, no judgments, no pronouncements,
and a great deal of willingness to allow for other possibilities.
I'm not sure there are *less* offensive ways to present an idea.
If it's the idea itself that offends you, there's nothing that anyone
can do about that. If we all refrained from voicing our thoughts
for fear of offending someone somewhere, it would be very quiet
indeed.
Re: .69
>I personally know so many people who either live in female headed
>households or were brought up in them that I can not understand
>the statement that they are not visiable to the average young male.
Unfortunately, your perceptions might have little bearing on the
perceptions of the average young male. Knowing several young males
would give a better basis for understanding what they might or might
not be able to perceive.
|
721.71 | | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Sat Mar 05 1988 17:07 | 7 |
| re .70
Does having a son and 3 nephews and working with youth groups
qualify as knowing some young males?
_peggy
|
721.72 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Sat Mar 05 1988 17:40 | 6 |
| Re: .71
Qualify? I'm not sure who's in charge of certifying qualifications
around here. It makes more sense to me to evaluate the situation
based on your knowledge of young males rather than single mother
families.
|
721.73 | tax money | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Sat Mar 05 1988 17:54 | 13 |
| On the contrary, it's highly indicative of how young men are taught
to ignore women-headed families.
"Living off the state" carries the baggage that this is an easy
task. It's not: there's considerable bureaucracy to deal with to
keep getting AFDC. Now, here's another endeavor that also means
that your income derives from the government--the military. In
fact, this was the safety net of the young men of my high school
days: if I can't go to college or get a job in [hometown], I can
always enlist. Surely motherhood is as honorable a profession as
soldiering. Except that, why then is welfare never enough and why
does it carry such a stigma.
|
721.74 | | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Sat Mar 05 1988 20:54 | 45 |
| Re: .69
> I think that they are there but that they are considered
> divient (sp?) from the norm and not discussed.
That's one possibility but I think that you are missing the point.
In order to a boy to choose the role of the nurchuror and be freed
from the role of provider he must have a role model of a man who
is a care giver and is supported by a woman. I have not seen
many of these in my lifetime. If I did not it might have been because
a man who is supported may try to hide that fact because society still
demands that he be the provider.
Re: .70
> I think you're slightly missing her point. You're talking about
^^^
> "should." She's talking about "is."
^^^^^
> ... Someone "may" follow the line of reasoning she presents.
^^^
Err... that's "He" not "She"...the "O->" is supposed to be a Greek
"Male" symbol.
> "Living off the state" carries the baggage that this is an easy
> task. It's not: there's considerable bureaucracy to deal with to
> keep getting AFDC.
I didn't mean to imply that it was easy. It only has to be easier
than the alternatives...which are very few. We will have a welfare
state until we start to provide some alternatives.
> --the military... this was the safety net of the young men of my high
> school days: if I can't go to college or get a job in [hometown], I can
> always enlist.
The military is the safety net that allows a man to survive. It does
not free him from the need to provide in order to have a family.
Marriage almost always frees the wife of part of the responsibility
to provide for the coming family. How many men quit their jobs
as soon as they marry or bare a child? How many women?
MJC O-> (aka Mike Carleton)
|
721.75 | "Support" = Paying bills? | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Mar 07 1988 08:46 | 34 |
|
Imagine hearing this day in and day out for generations:
"I'm supporting Harry while he goes out and works for a salary.
He seems to need to draw a paycheck in order to feel fullfilled.
Sometimes I wish we could trade places and I could get paid for
working an 8-hour day, but as a man, he'd probably have trouble
keeping up with the pressures of child-rearing. Better he should
keep his *Part-Time* job. (i.e., only 8 hours)"
The way we use phrases like "supported by" is really starting to
get to me. Does anyone else feel a value judgement implicit in
that phrase? In my view, any man who goes out and puts in a 8 (or
so) hour day and comes home to hot meals, clean home, and well-behaved,
happy kids is being "supported" by his partner (usually a woman).
It strikes me that as long as we equate the phrase "supported by"
with =not working=, few young men will choose child rearing/home-making
as a career.
I also found the "living off the state" comment to be quite classist,
but the assumptions behind its use troubled me even more. Do many
people really think that the use of welfare continues through multiple
generations because children see it as a good deal? I think many
of us from largely white, middle-class families are so isolated from real
poverty (and I don't mean eating beans and rice for a couple of
years while you go to graduate school) that we forget that in many
communities, good health, enough food, good schools (and time to
go to school) are advantages that only a few have access to.
Justine
|
721.76 | Equal pay = equal opportunity | AQUA::WALKER | | Mon Mar 07 1988 10:21 | 17 |
| Perhaps one of the reasons that you don't see too many men being
supported by women and raising families is that generally women
still are paid about 62% of what men are paid.
Even though women work as hard and long as men they are not
rewarded with enough money to make ends meet.
What man would take that kind of a pay cut to stay home for a
few years. What man would do that while simultaneously being
cut off from his peer support and would voluntarily remove
himself from his career path?
Perhaps some women are offended by the term "living off the state"
because they do work hard but because of the economic situation
must supplement their earnings through the government. Some of
them may put in forty hours and still not earn enough to feed
their children.
|
721.78 | stigma == no role models | MEIS::TILLSON | Sugar Magnolia | Mon Mar 07 1988 13:00 | 54 |
| Society does indeed frown on men who choose to be "househusbands".
Tom took about two years off from working. We lived on my salary.
(which was ok, but we weren't exactly living in the lap of luxury,
and remember that I'm a "highly paid software engineer". This option
is only an option for the few of us that have jobs that provide
us with a reasonable income!)
I enjoyed the experience greatly. I never did any housework; I
got breakfast in bed; my lunch was packed, my checkbook balanced,
my clothes were always cleaned and pressed, and dinner was always
ready when I got home from work. And there was always something
neat for me at the end of the day. Perhaps some tidbit from public
TV that he had seen during the day, or some new thing he had researched
at the library, or a drawing or painting he had done, or a room
that was reorganized while I was at work. IT WAS WONDERFUL!
Socially it was disasterous. Many people (mostly men who were
supporting their wives or girlfriends!) said, "What, he isn't working?
Kick the lazy bum out!" There were "friends" (again, mostly men)
who refused to socialize with us, or who were condescending when
they did socialize with us, because he was somehow a lessor man
in their eyes. Our relationship was satisfactory to us, but many
people just couldn't believe that!
Incidently, I think he worked harder than I did! I did feel some
level of frustration being the sole source of our income. I felt
less willing to "rock the boat" at work, because we were totally
dependent on my income. I don't expect this is any different for
anyone who supports a family, male or female.
Tom has been back at work for about nine months now. The money
is nice and we have a lifestyle that is certainly more material
now. But I really miss being supported the way I was when all I
had to do was bring home the paycheck. I had a hard time adjusting
to doing my share of the chores, and I still don't have nearly his
level of homemaking skills. He's patient, and I'm learning, though.
The bottom line: this can happen, and does happen, but men who
choose to stay at home take incredible grief for it. Until this
attitude changes, until homemaking and other things that have
traditionally been considered "woman's work" are adequately valued,
most men will not feel free to stay at home. Homemakers get little
respect.
Rita
BTW: I was a "welfare kid"; and I'm not taking any free rides!
I don't think it follows that children raised on welfare (often
the only option and an inadequate one at that!) will "perpetuate
the cycle". That is a myth. Living "on the state" is a lousy
existence. I'm not offended by your statement, Mike. I just don't
think it is true.
|
721.79 | Knee Jerk | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Mon Mar 07 1988 17:40 | 33 |
| I don't know where people are getting the idea that I am "Classist"
that living off the state is a good deal. It almost sounds as though
people are not reading what I am writing and just put in the knee
jerk reaction instead.
Re .75 Justine
> It strikes me that as long as we equate the phrase "supported by"
> with =not working=, few young men will choose child rearing/home-making
> as a career.
I depends on how actually the young man feels the negative effects
of the requirements of being the provider. He usually does not
get the choice now but if there existed women willing and able
to provide the financial support, would some choose to escape the
responsibility? I hope a few might. The first might be for well
paid female CEO's, but after they have broken the ground...who knows?
> Do many people really think that the use of welfare continues through
> multiple generations because children see it as a good deal?
I don't think anybody think's living on welfare is a good deal. I don't
understand why you think I do. As I have said, I think the economic
and social conditions are the main factor.
Re .76 The 62% factor
On the average woman make less, but there should be a few women who can
afford to financially support a husband who does not work. Women's
wages may have to change before enough of these couples are around
to influence the young men growing up.
MJC O->
|
721.80 | who cares what they think | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Mar 07 1988 18:01 | 6 |
| Re: .78
If I had friends who were condescending to me or mine, or who refused
to socialize with me, I think I would consider them not friends
but acquaintances.
|
721.81 | Thoughts | MSD36::STHILAIRE | 1 step up & 2 steps back | Tue Mar 08 1988 10:24 | 48 |
| Re .79, my "knee jerk" reaction to your notes is that you are jealous
that you haven't found a rich woman to support you so that you can
quit work and stay home! I don't mean to be a wise-ass but that's
what it sounds like. It sounds as though you are upset that women
have had the chance to stay home while a man supports them, and
that hardly any men have ever had the opportunity. I would think
that the ideal of a non-sexist society would be that in the future
NOBODY expects to have somebody else support them while they stay
home, but that everybody realize that they have to be responsible
for themselves.
On the other hand, any agreement between two consenting adults is
their business. So, if one person wants to support another one,
that's their choice. And, I have no real problem with women who
do stay home and take care of their kids if they can afford to.
It's just important to me that kids growing up realize it's not an
option they can count on - male or female.
I think it's wrong for women to grow up thinking that a man will
support them. I grew up that way, and although I worked the whole
time I was married, I really looked to my husbands higher pay and
job opportunities to provide me with the lifestyle I wanted. I've
been suffering the consequences ever since my divorce. I wish I
had been brought up to believe that getting an education and a good
job was more important than getting a husband, but I wasn't. I
learned it the hard way.
There have been problems for both men and women because of the sexist
society of the past. Men have had to work and provide for a family
if they wanted one, but on the other hand it's been a lot harder
(and still is) for women to achieve economic independence and,
therefore, freedom to live the way they want.
I still think the ideal situation is two people who both have high
incomes, 2 kids at most, sending the kids to daycare, and both sharing
in the household chores.
When I think of raising liberated boys, I think of being able to
raise boys who don't have to worry about being sissys, who don't
have to be afraid of admitting they'd rather play the violin than
baseball. I remember once when one of my nephews was small, he
had fallen down and started to cry. His father said, "Boys don't
cry." I told him that was sexist, and he said, "He's a boy! He
has to learn to be tough!" How many world problems has that attitude
caused us?
Lorna
|
721.82 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Tue Mar 08 1988 11:58 | 5 |
| Re: .81
Somehow I get the feeling that we've been reading different notes.
That's not my impression at all. Either I've missed something that
was there or I didn't find something that wasn't.
|
721.83 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Tue Mar 08 1988 12:00 | 4 |
| Re: .74
It's kind of amusing to be on the other end of that for once (though
most of the people in Soapbox have clued in by now).
|
721.84 | Maybe I slipped into an alternate universe | MSD24::STHILAIRE | 1 step up & 2 steps back | Tue Mar 08 1988 14:09 | 5 |
| Re .82, perhaps the world looks so different to each of us (and
these notesfiles look so different to each of us) that we *have*
been reading different notes!!!
|
721.85 | | TERZA::ZANE | freedom tastes sweet! | Tue Mar 08 1988 17:17 | 17 |
|
My two cents (and apologies for coming into this discussion so late):
I strongly dislike the terms "househusband" and "housewife." The
implication of being married to a house is too much and serves to
emphasize the already latent sexism.
There's nothing wrong with being a homemaker, assuming that one has
a partner for financial support. Whether the homemaker or the financial
supporter is male or female is hardly relevant. If children, no matter
what gender, are encouraged to be themselves, to be individuals in their
own right, then it doesn't and can't matter what "society" attempts to
dictate.
Terza L. Zane
|
721.87 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | $50 never killed anybody | Wed Mar 09 1988 05:49 | 26 |
| re:.81
I can't speak for MJC, but in one sense, *I* would like nothing
better than to find a woman who can support me in the lifestyle
to which I would like to be accustomed. This is true for no other
reason than that I'm lazy (I know, I know, housework isn't a walk
in the park, either, but I'd like to pretend it is for my own mental
well being :-)). If I got married to someone who *could* support the
both of us on her salary, I would be content to be the homemaker.
I look at it logically. If one person has to stay home for whatever
reason, it'd be better if it was the one who made the lesser salary.
That only makes sense from a financial point of view. Of course,
this makes it unfairly balanced toward the woman being the homemaker.
If I married a woman who made a better salary than I, then it would
make sense for her to "work" and me to "stay home".
But this is strictly theoretical. Neither I nor my current SO are
inclined to want children, which is the most common reason for one
partner to stay home, so it's likely that we'd both just keep
working.
But I see nothing stigmatic about being a homemaker. At least, I
don't think there *should* be anything stigmatic.
--- jerry
|
721.88 | that's it exactly! now what do I do about it? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 09 1988 08:59 | 35 |
| re: .81
Lorna, THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU.
This is *exactly* the situation I was trying to talk about.
Girls in this society are simply not raised to *expect* to be
financially responsible for themselves. They feel, as Kat
mentioned, that they can always give up the struggle to provide
for themselves.
They will help out when it's necessary, but when it's not,
they quit. Someone said exactly that in an earlier note, and
thought it was evidence of equality.
It's not. It's a measure of how deep the burden on young boys is.
Most of the recent discussion hasn't been about equality, or
liberation of either sex. It's been about role reversal.
I see no reason at all, less than no reason, why a partnership
should require one wage-earner and one home-maker.
We're both in the relationship together. Aren't we both jointly
responsible for determining the economics of that relationship
as well as the emotional climate? Can't we take turns nurturing
when we feel like it?
And how do I raise my son to feel good about his nurturing
side in a society that equates nuturance in men with effeminacy?
To feel free expressing it when the girls he meets are being
raised to expect him to take over responsibility for their
physical comfort?
--bonnie
|
721.89 | Are you raising counter-revolutionary daughters ? | HEFTY::CHARBONND | JAFO | Wed Mar 09 1988 09:10 | 15 |
| re.88 'the pressure on young boys today' could stem from the mixed
messages they're getting :
A. women are your equals
B. women expect you to support them when they don't work
C. don't expect them to support *you* if you choose not to work
A conflict between the traditional and the new. Imagine a boy who
sees his mother go off to work every day and support, or substantially
contribute to, the family. Then he goes to school and hears a girl
his own age talk of staying home while the man works. Liberating
young men cannot be separated from liberating young women. These
kids need to understand simple concepts like '$100,000 houses',
and '12% mortgages'.
Is the high suicide rate among teens so surprising ?
|
721.90 | Role reversel step needed | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Wed Mar 09 1988 10:31 | 41 |
| Re .81
> ... my "knee jerk" reaction to your notes is that you are jealous
> that you haven't found a rich woman to support you so that you can
> quit work and stay home!
We are not talking about me, but I do find the idea of being
financially supported attractive. Mainly it comes from the weariness
of the constant burden of supporting myself. I don't think I could
adapt to permanent homemaking but it would be nice to have a break
from the financial burden once in a while. I also hope that I would be able
to take a break from work in order to participate in the raising
of my own children someday. It would really hurt to see my children
grow up before I get to know them. It would also be nice to have
the time to pursue other interests that I have no time for now and
that can't be expected to support myself with.
Re .88
> Girls in this society are simply not raised to *expect* to be
> financially responsible for themselves. ... They will help out
> when it's necessary, but when it's not, they quit. Someone said
> exactly that in an earlier note, and thought it was evidence of
> equality.
> It's not. It's a measure of how deep the burden on young boys is.
*EXACTLY*
> I see no reason at all, less than no reason, why a partnership
> should require one wage-earner and one home-maker.
The problem I see is that if the roles are only mixed around and
shared a bit the ultimate responsibility for providing will still be
given to the man by default. Also the ultimate responsibility for
child rearing will go to the woman. I don't think that you will
see people *really* preparing themselves for the opposite role until
there is a real possibility that they will have to play it. I believe
that role reversal is a necessary step on the road to true equality.
MJC O->
|
721.91 | change is hard on all of us... | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 09 1988 10:40 | 28 |
| re: .89 -
Dana, I have no idea what kind of daughter I'm raising. She's 14,
she's a beautiful person and the joy of my life, but as to her
attitudes and beliefs -- well, I've been liberating myself over
the course of the years, and I've tried to share my changing
attitudes with her. But she's growing up and has taken a great
deal of responsibility for her own life and decisions already. I
can't tell her what to think.
I can only hope that what I am turns out to be a good role
model for her. I love her, I guess there's not much more I
can do.
But you're right about the mixed messages. And as I read your
statements, I was struck by how easy it is to read that as
"Women want all the privileges and none of the responsibilities."
No wonder men are angry if that's the mesasge they're getting
from a world in the process of change.
In the face of these messages, it's easy to see what to do
for a daughter -- try to make sure she's prepared to take care
of herself and understands that's her responsibility.
But how do I raise a son to deal with that reality?
--bonnie
|
721.92 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Wed Mar 09 1988 10:40 | 16 |
|
re "housewife"
This word has a similar derivation to "alewife" or "fishwife" or many other
early or middle English terms. It suggests a woman whose occupation is
primarily related to the house: not a woman married to the house. Indeed if
I remember correctly "wyf" (the early English form) is not even
specifically female. "Househusband" is a grotesque neologism.
re "homemaker"
I dislike that for similar reasons to I suspect many contributors here
dislike "housewife" - it suggests to me that only one partner is engaged
in making the home.
/. Ian .\
|
721.93 | a linguistic aside | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 09 1988 10:59 | 24 |
| re: .92
Ian, you're exactly right about the derivation of 'huswyf' and
also right that the term 'wyf' didn't used to convey gender.
The term 'hus' didn't used to mean strictly a place where people
live, either. It had a much broader connotation -- the usage
of "House of XXXX" to identify a family business is much closer
to the original.
Today we'd probably identify the profession of 'huswif' as
something like a steward or a manager or a foreman. It was the
person who was responsible for managing the 'house' -- seeing to
the planting and the harvest, hiring cooks, arranging meals,
making sure the roof was repaired, and so on.
One of its functions was to free up the soldiers to go and make
war, so it was a job usually held by someone who wasn't going to
go to war -- an older retainer, a relative who was disabled, the
spouse or oldest daughter. (Note that there *are* cases on
record, mostly in Sweden, in which the *woman* was the head of
household who went to war. . .)
--bonnie
|
721.94 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | JAFO | Wed Mar 09 1988 11:34 | 8 |
| re .91 daughter/son
As a first step to real equality, raise 'em *both* the same way.
Teach them to value self-responsibility in themselves *and
in others*. Irresponsibility stinks no matter who's doing it.
Dana
|
721.95 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Mar 09 1988 13:15 | 7 |
| Re: .88
>Girls in this society are simply not raised to *expect* to be
>financially responsible for themselves.
Careful with those generalizations. Exceptions have a tendency
to crop up (like right here).
|
721.96 | | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Mar 09 1988 14:01 | 17 |
| RE: .95
True, while it *is* a generalization that girls are not raised
to expect to be financially responsible for themselves, it's
probably accurate to say that MOST have the idea somewhere in
their minds.
My mother raised me to ALWAYS be able to support myself (back
when that wasn't so common) BUT it was so I'd "have something
to fall back on in case something happened to my husband".
I think we're going thru a "schizophrenic" phase as we attempt
to change our thinking, and this is what's causing the mixed messages
Dana mentioned.
--DE
|
721.97 | hopefully they won't think that for long | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | Tea in the Sahara with you... | Wed Mar 09 1988 14:43 | 21 |
| My mother never told me I should only use my vocations to "fall
back on". I went to a vocational high school, fully expecting to
support myself (and then on to college, same goal in mind).
Both of my parents have always held jobs, although
my mother switched to part time while until my sister and I were
10 and 8. Both of my parents encouraged me to seek a worthwhile,
satisfying, LUCRATIVE profession. I never even considered being
entirely supported by someone else. After my allowance stopped
at age 12, I worked part time and summers, so I could save and buy
the things I wanted, help pay for college, etc...
Perhaps if more jr. high/high school girls were encouraged to learn
trades and work after school and during the summers, they would
find that not only were they able to support themselves in life,
but also there's a certain feeling of freedom and self-respect gained
from spending money YOU earned, money YOU deserve, on things YOU
want....also, you tend to take less for granted, and learn just
how the economics of life work...
-Jody
|
721.98 | A lesson of responsibility | NSG022::POIRIER | Only 13 days 'til spring! | Wed Mar 09 1988 14:43 | 44 |
| There are definitely some mixed messages out there for women and men. I
always grew up with the notion that you are responsible for yourself.
Too many problems stem from expecting some one else to take care of you
etc. My mom was a working mom and always encouraged me to be
independant and responsible for myself. So what a shock it was when I
had to teach my mom the same lesson of responsibility.
For 9 years my mom had been a teacher. She had a masters degree in
mathematics and was making okay money. Then our family decided to move
to New Hampshire. My mom received a job teaching in the state of New
Hampshire but took a third of a cut in pay. The pay was atrocious (but
that is another topic). After a year of teaching for peanuts she decided
to take time off and change her career. My father thought this was a
great idea and supported her all the way. Things were tight though
with me going to college but we made it. After two years my mom
finally decided to go into real estate.
She did fantastic. Her first year she made more money than my father.
They made some wise investments and they started to plan for early
retirement. You see with my mom making such good money my father would
be able to retire a few years earlier. So they planned on retiring
together in 6 or 7 years instead of my dad not being able to retire for
another 13 years.
But then my mom started talking of the hassles of the real estate
business and she wanted to quit. My father saw his plans for an early
retirement go down the tubes. All the pressure and responsiblity for
their financial well being was being put on him. She could quit any
time she wanted to - but he could not. She could stay home without any
stigma or guilt.
I couldn't believe she was talking like this - my mom who always taught
me to be independant. I finally sat her down and had a little daughter
to mother talk about responsibility and how it wasn't fair for her
husband to take all the financial responsibility. There were no
children at home to take care of and they could now afford a house
keeper. After a while I think she finally understood and I taught her
a very valuable lesson, the same one that she had taught me.
She had two sets of values, one internally for herself and one for
everyone else.
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721.99 | Keep on keepin' on | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Wed Mar 09 1988 15:42 | 19 |
|
re: .91
"In the face of these [mixed] messages, it's easy to see what to do
for a daughter -- try to make sure she's prepared to take care
of herself and understands that's her responsibility.
But how do I raise a son to deal with that reality?"
At the risk of sounding like a wiseguy, I'd hazard a guess that
if you raise your son the same way you've raised Kat, you'll
be doing just fine. From previous replies, it sounds as if you've
spent a fair amount of time with your children trying to know them
and trying to have them know you. From your description of Kat,
it sounds as if you sowed good seeds in fertile soil; I suspect
that the same process is already at work with your son.
Steve
|
721.100 | | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Wed Mar 09 1988 17:29 | 2 |
| A lot of us are showing our class bias here...isn't it only suburbia
that expects/expected kept-at-home wives?
|
721.101 | Fuddy duddy hippy speaks again... | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Mar 09 1988 18:48 | 45 |
| Personally, as far as I'm concerned, finding a good wife was far
more important to me than getting a good education and a job.
Maybe it's because I'm hopelessly old fashioned, and then again
perhaps it was because I was a long haired hippy at heart. (Of
course these days being a long hair hippy IS old-fashioned but
that's not what I meant.)
On the one hand, family is very important to me. My goals have
always centered around having kids and raising a family.
Although that requires resources to support them, those
resources are not as important to the family as the people who
make it. Thus the right companion for life and cofounder of my
family is more important to me than the means by which we manage
to support ourselves.
On the other hand, to paraphrase a certain set of brothers from
my past, "Love will get you through times of no money better
than money will get you through times of no love." (Those of you
who recognize the quote can all go off and snicker now at the
analogy.) Being a good old 60's hippy, I've really never been to
worried about the material stuff. Heck, I like it, but it's
never been very important in and of itself, and I've always been
confident that I could get along somehow.
So, given that finding a good mate for life is more important to
me than getting a good education, and a good job, why shouldn't
the reverse be true for my wife? With the right partner at our
sides, it seems like there isn't much that we can't do. I agree
that it is important that the emphasis should not be on finding
a spouse because one has little regard for one's own ability to
get along, but assuming that the intent is for the two of us to
tackle the world together...
As to the joys of earning MY money to spend on what I want, that
is on the one hand something that I can identify with and
something quite alien to me. My assumption (as I said in another
discussion) is that all of our money is our money, whether
earned by me or my wife. Given the importance of family to me,
(and some of that hippy attitude towards materialism) I just
don't make a big distinction between MINE and OURS when it comes
to resources. The concept makes sense regarding specific things
in which we have invested emotion, but not money or the day to
day things.
JimB.
|
721.102 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Mar 10 1988 06:45 | 5 |
| Jim, I can almost imagine you and Selma happily raising a family
during the Depression without an engineer's salary. Seems like
you'd find a way to make the challenges fun.
Holly
|
721.103 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | JAFO | Thu Mar 10 1988 08:01 | 1 |
| RE .100 Farms, factory workers, exec's, hardly all of a class.
|
721.104 | would that it were simple | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Mar 10 1988 14:56 | 27 |
| re: .100
No, that's not the only place sex bias crops up. It would be
nice to think that all the problems of sexism in this society
could be blamed on suburbia and the yuppies, but it won't work.
I grew up working class -- mechanic's daughter, living without
welfare below the poverty level most of my school years, raised in
farm country. The attitude toward money and taking care of
yourself did tend to be different in that you assumed times were
going to be rough enough that probably you would have to work and
support the family.
I definitely got the message that this was an unfair way to run
the world, that in a properly run society you, too, would be able
to have a house in the suburbs and visit the hairdresser twice a
week.
Now I'm a yuppie. I have a different set of problems -- life
doesn't get any easier even if it is more comfortable. Same old
sexism.
re: .101 -- Jim, just reading your notes restores some of my
faith in the world and its future . . . thanks for reminding
me of the good old days. Keep the faith . . .
--bonnie
|
721.105 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Tue Mar 15 1988 14:59 | 36 |
|
.100� A lot of us are showing our class bias here...isn't it only suburbia
.100� that expects/expected kept-at-home wives?
No.
As Bonnie and I pointed out earlier "huswyf" had litle to do
with sex, nor indeed with the modern concept of "home".
I spent much of my formative years on my grandparents farm. My
grandfather indeed fitted much of the classic stearotype of the
"bradwinner", going out and working the farm, but grandmother
indubitably fitted the role of steward of the estate, planning
and managing matters. She hired and fired the farmhands and the
domestic servants, she talked to the seed merchants and other
dealers. She managed the bank accounts etc.
BUT she stayed at home most of the time, and in the terminology
of the [British] Inland Revenue was "not gainfully employed",
ie a "housewife".
My Mother in fact hasn't "worked" from the day she married
until today, largely the victim of a class stereotype, since in
early married life my Father was a career army officer and it
"wasn't done" for an officer's wife to work. However again this
is more a factor of "County Life" than suburbia.
My wife doesn't work - it isn't by choice, the [US] Immigration
Service decrees it. She manages our home, plans the household
budget and manages everything that needs managing. I like
Bonnie's idea that she is the "steward" of our home, rather
than an [enforced] housewife. More importantly *she* likes the
concept. It much better describes what she contributes to our
relationship than a modern stereotype can.
/. Ian .\
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721.106 | misc | YODA::BARANSKI | Words have too little bandwidth... | Thu Mar 31 1988 15:27 | 44 |
| RE: Female head of household
Just because a woman files as "Head of Household" does not mean that that woman
provides 100% of the money for that family. Seperated Fathers pay child support
to provide in many cases over half of the support for the family.
Just a logical loophole to watch out for.
RE: welfare
It is a myth (statisically) that people on welfare sponge off the state for
long preiods of time. The average is 4 years, including permenently disabled
people.
RE: female sole support role model for males
I know that I had no such role model. I had heard of men abandoning their
families, but that was not presented as an allowable role model. Even if
I had had such a *female* role model, I do not know how much cross over between
sexes role models carry.
RE: motherhood as good as soldiering
I would not be 'mothering' then soldiering. I would not have considered
soldiering.
RE: Support <> $$$
Certainly a man coming home after working 8 hours, and not having to work the
rest of the day or be bothered by wife and children to do things would be
considered a 'part time job'. But in real life I don't believe that that is the
case. I do not know of many men who are allowed to come home and collapse.
Most men in my experience have work waiting at home for them as well as at work.
RE: female pay = 62% of male pay
Is this statistic for comparable work? If not, it's not any less serious,
but I believe it's barking up the wrong tree to attack it from the "pay"
standpoint.
This is one of the most encouraging notes for me in this conference. Thank
You!
Jim.
|
721.107 | I had such a role model | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Enjoy your life. If you don't no one else will | Thu Mar 31 1988 21:00 | 25 |
| I may be unique, but there was a 2-parent, houshusband-working wife
combination in my family. I had a great-uncle, who was taught "women's
work" by his mother as a necessity in a large family. When he became
an adult, he didn't do well at "men's work". He married, had several
children, and several jobs per year. His wife had been a registered
nurse before they married. She soon tired of his being continally
fired, and told him "stay home with the kids. I'll get a job". Her job
at a hospital paid much more than his jobs did - especially when she
was able to keep it for a long time. That worked out pretty well for
them, although various family members viewed him as a "lazy bum", and
all viewed him as a failure.
Now, my SO stays home, takes care of the details of running our home.
It is wonderful to not have to go home and clean house, fix the house,
arrange to somehow get the car fixed and to work on time, etc. As long
as I provide the money, it's all taken care of. Our friends haven't
been a problem, although my parents think I'm being taken advantage of.
His parents just said "oh, you don't want to do that."
By reading all of the last replies, I almost feel compelled that
we should in some way become active in some children's lives - so
that they can see it's not always "Man goes to work, woman stays
home", or "Man and woman go to work, share work at home".
Elizabeth
|