S
Serap
Guest
yes, from one proud mother to anotherMaybe…but it has been an interesting thread nonetheless.
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yes, from one proud mother to anotherMaybe…but it has been an interesting thread nonetheless.
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About all that, I’ll just not comment.It has now been a well established fact that women pursue careers at nearly the same rate as men and they work fulltime at nearly the same rate as men. Those numbers have steadily increased for the last three decades. This has been the case long enough to help us create an informed opinion about the impact of these developments.
So, here are a few questions"
**Add on questions for married couples: **
- Has women working fulltime outside the home been a good or bad development for the American family?
- Has our culture improved since women entered the workforce in massive numbers?
- Are our children better or worse off?
- Has women working fulltime made this nation stronger, weaker, or no impact?
- Have our children become stronger or weaker in the faith?
- Has entering careers and fulltime work been good or bad for women (and women who are moms)?
- Would women prefer to work and let their husbands stay at home and care for their children? Or, would women rather both spouses work?
- Would it better to have men stay at home with the kids, rather then neither parent staying home?
As a working mother, I’ve actually had quite the opposite experience…About all that, I’ll just not comment.
However, most of the women I know that were raised to be wives and mothers suffer from a huge inferiority complex due to being compared to “career” women. Motherhood in our culture is not considered a real vocation.
And it’s such a shame, especially for those that are called to it.
I have nothing but the utmost respect for SAHMs. I do see their job as extremely important and skillful. I also hold my live-in nanny with the utmost respect for taking care of my beautiful children while I am at work.As a working mother, I’ve actually had quite the opposite experience…
So I guess it just depends on individual circumstances…
So do I! In fact, I would love to be one!I have nothing but the utmost respect for SAHMs. I do see their job as extremely important and skillful. I also hold my live-in nanny with the utmost respect for taking care of my beautiful children while I am at work.
My kids are in their teens so little negative effects for them, however less time for meals, chats, husband. me time. I had no idea the difficulties women have had to try balance both work and home, thankfully as mentioned the kids are older and my husband is a way better cook. Having spent most of my school life without my parents (boarding school) I never experienced the relationship with my parents like the relationship my children have with me. My experience is therefore one which my staying at home benefited the whole family.So, since you had that experience from boths sides, how would you answer the general questions? Have things (along the lines of the question points) gotten better, worse, or no real impact?
First of all, why do you assume a working mother has to leave her children with strangers? DOn’t you think mothers take the time to get to know their children’s caregivers?? Do you also not understand the strong bond that occurs between caregiver and child? And, finally, why do you think caregivers are raising these children? Are they deciding their schools? Where they attend church?Worse. Unless, of course, one believes that children prefer being raised by strangers.
Teach who what? Caregivers don’t teach?It would be difficult to argue they have become stronger, because many now have no one to teach them.
Well, since I wasn’t addressing you or any other working mother, I think you are taking my post too personally. It was my experience that I was speaking of, not yours.I’m sorry…I can’t help but be slightly offended by this. You do realize that working women are also able to raise their own children from birth to college too, right? You do realize you don’t have to be standing next to your child to raise him, right? And dads who work are also raising their children too, right? I’m not trying to be difficult, but to imply that working women are not raising their children is very hurtful.
*irishpatrick
Regular Member
So, would you say that our culture has improved, gotten worse, or had no impact as a result of women entering the workforce at easily 90% or higher rates?
That really is my basic question. Have things gotten worse, better or remained the same?*
My late mother use to say, “Every generation gets weaker and wiser”. What does this mean? It means that we have a tendency to romanticize the past; ignoring its weaknesses. More women were stay at home mothers pre-1960’s (in the West), but we had legal segregation. Abortion was illegal, but domestic abuse was tolerated. Children spent more time with their mothers, but many fathers were absentee; working long hours. Women entering the workforce did not cause cultural decline, nor was it
legal contraception. The West has been in moral and spiritual decline for 500 years, since the Renaissance! 500 years! The cultural restraints which prevented full hedonism have been eroding for centuries. Remember, in the “good old days”, you could enslave human beings, rape women of color with impunity, lynch without trial, murder Jews in pogroms, exploit workers, ravage continents in the name of Colonialism, etc. Many of these injustices have only now been rectified within the last 60 years! The Civil Rights Movement began in the 50’s for a reason. Those dutiful, stay at home mothers kept their kids out of school, rather than let them sit next to an African-American child! Those stay at home mothers were members of country clubs, which excluded Jews and Blacks. Each generation is weaker and wiser!
I think they respond fine. I’ve seen it first hand. I teach in a Catholic school and more than 50% of my parents had stay at home dads last year. Almost that many this year too. It was great, actually! The kids loved having dad on their field trips, class parties, etc.Thank you. How do you think the general public would respond to men in large numbers taking over such duties?
I would be fine with it! But, we don’t make enough money for one of us to be a stay at home parent.How would you feel if your husband wanted you to go to work so he could stay home and take care of your family? Even if that is not what you both chose in the beginning, what if he changed his mind and wanted to reverse that? How would feel and would you let him do that?
A bad thing.Yes, quite true…but was it a good thing or bad thing? Is all the free love and sex a good thing for us collectively or a bad thing?
Nope, not at all. I was/am curious…nothing more.
Is this guy doing some kind of research for a paper or something?
Thank you for clarifying. Yes, I can see how your situation called for it. I did sah for a time. I did enjoy it. I just took exception to the wording you used when you phrased your sah status as “raising your children”…it seemed to imply that had you been working you wouldn’t have been raising your children. I am glad to see that’s not what you meant.Well, since I wasn’t addressing you or any other working mother, I think you are taking my post too personally. It was my experience that I was speaking of, not yours.![]()
Yes, the son with celiac disease also has ADHD, same sorts of issues. I wanted to homeschool him during middle school since ADHD kids have a lot of trouble at those ages, and indeed, he did, but my husband did not support my reasoning so he was in Catholic middle school.I eventually quit my job and focused on the kids. What a blessing. I have a son with sensory issues and ADHD. He needed constant attention and even needed to be homeschooled at one point. I was able to help him learn how to succeed in life. It was not unusually to get phone calls from multiple teachers in one day. Now he is in high school and doing great.
I love that I can go to my kids games. That I am home when they get home from school. I never have to worry about snow days, teacher workshops or school delays. Life is so much easier not working.
**There are negatives. I haven’t worked in 8 years. How do I get back into the job market now? What if I wanted to leave my husband, how would I support myself and my children? I often feel trapped. ** By giving up my job, I became dependent on a man. I prefer to rely only on myself.
My husband was also against homeschooling. But one day, my son was being screamed at and in the office before school even started. That was the last straw. I pulled him out of school against my husband wishes. It was 6th grade. Yes - middle school is the hardest for ADHD. It was great homeschooling. No phone calls from schoolYes, the son with celiac disease also has ADHD, same sorts of issues. I wanted to homeschool him during middle school since ADHD kids have a lot of trouble at those ages, and indeed, he did, but my husband did not support my reasoning so he was in Catholic middle school.
Your last paragraph could be me, as well. I have lived an independent life and supported myself since I was 19. Worked since I was 14. Now I have no resume whatsoever. It’s hard to even think of what to put on a resume’ after 20 years of being a mother and homemaker.
I think women have a hard time no matter what we choose. Really.