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Irishmom2
Guest
Believe me, it’s not my insecurity. You do not know my situation one way or the other to be pointing fingers at me quite frankly.
Absolutely. That’s precisely why I’m working so hard on curing my health issues but in the meantime, I’m doing as much as I can to support my husband.you mentioned being in school, is there an expectation that you will use your degree for paid employment when you are done?
I was going to say some of the same things that you’ve said.You make a lot of assumptions about people, and you have no real way of knowing what goes on in someone else’s home.
You assume that the other person helps out. Not always true.
You assume that cleaning up after one other person is all that people do.
Some people take over all of the home maintenance and repairs, yard work, painting, bill paying, running errands, and care for extended family members like parents and In-laws so they can remain in their own homes. All of that in addition to laundry, shopping, meal making and arranging family events.
You paint a picture with a very broad brush.
That’s the thing though, I never do.my only suggestion would be not to engage in discussions with her about your situation
I actually wrote that on treadmill at the gym, so I wasn’t able to elaborate.Wow, that’s amazing. I think homemaking as a vocation is underappreciated in our society. Its refreshing to hear about devoted women who put the needs of their family above their own (whether their work or stay home). God bless her!
Sounds familiar…work has some kind of worth out of itself here. You hear very often here people complaining with a touch of pride that they went to work so sick. I would (if there´s no fear or jobloss or unpaid sick days, of course) this behavior just stupid. No one has a benefit of spreading the flu in your office or going down with a heart attack because of a not well-cured virus infection. But, working when sick is part of this german suffering-pride.That’s a shame. I’ve visited Germany, and the people I met there were very nice.
But I will never forget a German-American landlord I had, who came over one Sunday mid-morning as my husband and I were relaxing and recovering from a hard week, and asked, “Why aren’t you two working?” It was funny. I think Germans might tend to overdo the work ethic.