C
CB_Catholic
Guest
I stayed at home for 10 years with the children. If my husband could have stayed at home and have me go to work the screen door would have lost it’s hinges from the speed at which I would have been out that door. But at the time, I could not make enough to support the family, wages were that ineqitable. My husband is the type who can cook and clean, do laundry, wash dishes, and tend to infants and children as well as I can. (Won’t iron, thoughHow do you think other women would feel about such a change?
Before answering, allow me to sharpen the query. Suppose the husband just one day decided that he wanted to leave the work force and enter into a stay-at-home dad life; he is not a lazy person, he will work hard to properly raise the kids. How do you think most women/moms would react to that change?
Do you not agree that most women expect that if someone will be home with the kids, that it will be them? Wouldn’t it be true that most women would feel hurt if their husbands wanted to take that role?
Being a guy I can only guess…![]()
Does that answer your question, at least in part?
BTW, I grew up in the “golden age” of the Ozzie and Harriet and Leave It To Beaver family myths (50’s and 60’s). The only friends I had whose mothers did not work were those whose fathers made a better than average salary. The rest of the women were out in the workforce–they were teachers, nurses, secretaries, receptionists, salesclerks, waitresses, bookeepers, seamstresses, beauticians, librarians, and factory workers. All jobs that paid considerably less than what men could make. It is a myth that most women stayed home 24/7 to keep house and raise children. Where I grew up, almost every woman had at least a part-time job. Only the ones who could afford it were home all the time, and if you lived in a rural area (as my grandparents did) and had a farm, and were a woman, you were out there in the fields, milking the cows, working in the garden, helping with the harvest, tending livestock, PLUS tending to children, cooking large meals, and keeping the house.
The generation of my grandparents, however, before WWII was a little bit different, depending on where you lived. I think more middle class women stayed home back then, but in the big cities and among the immigrant population many women worked–in factories and in family run businesses, as domestic help, and in the rural areas on the farm.
No, I don’t think women in the workforce has been a major contribution to societal decline. They have always been there, and in larger numbers than most people assume, but they’ve not received the recognition they have deserved. There have been many more insidious factors at work in our society.