In general what I see in society are a bunch of people trying to live beyond their means, and thus they have to work two jobs to pay for it. Too many people are trying for the “American Dream” and end up with massive debt. Again, it’s so firmly entrenched in society now that it’s very difficult to get out of it.
Ahh but a small house is now unaffordable in today’s market…two incomes are needed to pay off a mortgage for just a small home
We are pressured into attending college because we think that we can’t get a job without it or that we’re not “educated” and right away there’s a huge debt and one person working is going to have a hard time paying off two college debts.
That’s because you CAN’T get a good job without college. It’s just the way it is now. Highschool used to be enough…now college is barely enough and the debt
I’m not saying I don’t understand why [some] people go to work when we’re in this rut, or that it isn’t absolutely necessary at times. What I don’t understand is why people leave their children alone to go to work when they don’t have to. And affording that extra-large house or second brand new car is NOT a have-to situation that forces the second parent to go to work.
**Most working families I know have a small house, a used car (maybe two) and don’t have any luxuries that you are talking of and I live in a middle class neighborhood. Who wants to raise kids in a bad neighbourhood with bad schools??? ** No way…most people I know would rather have a bigger debt and buy a smaller house in a nice neighborhood.
I will also state again that two parents working limits job opportunities for those families that don’t even have one parent working. Really, there shouldn’t be a need to find statistics for this as it’s purely common sense. If there are a hundred jobs and eighty couples, it stands to reason that not all of them can be working. If out of those eighty families, forty have both parents working, that’s eighty jobs taken and twenty left for the remaining forty couples. Granted, women working does add a few jobs to society, such as more openings for babysitters and a need for more restaurant workers, however, those jobs are not jobs that are productive to a society - they are just more service jobs.
You’re right here… one income used to be enough, but it simply ain’t anymore
And one example from real life. My mother always stayed home with me and my siblings when we were growing up. I was always really grateful for that after watching everyone else being shipped to babysitters. My father, however, generally worked so late every week that I really didn’t see him except on weekends for the longest time. When I got older, I understood that it was something he
had to do because he was working to support the family, but when I was a young child who did not fully understand the situation, I resenting hardly seeing him.
Actually child psychologists that I frequented with my DD in the government run Early Years Centers in my city told me otherwise. They told me that girls in particular have a low self-esteem when daddy’s not around especially in the age of 0-2.
I can’t imagine what little children feel like when they are left alone by both parents on a constant basis to be tended by strangers. Now, once a week I’m at a place that has a daycare center and I see two older women trying to take care of about thirty two-year olds.
In my city, this would be illegal. There must be one daycare worker per 5 two year olds.
It is quite obvious to me that they cannot give the children the individual attention that they require at that age, nor are they qualified to do so considering they are not the parents. Honestly, I feel really sorry for those children. So
IF the mother working is not
absolutely necessary is it really worth the risk of resentment in the child, improper development, and precious family time (which you won’t get back) for a few more luxuries? Ask yourself that.
No woman I know is working for “luxuries” as you put it. Most women I know are working dang hard and every penny goes to the house, bills and kids. You got it all mixed up for sure. This ain’t 1950 anymore. Things are EXPENSIVE in my city!!! You can’t even buy a decent small house in my city for under $600,000
All this reminds me of the joke about the woman who hired a babysitter to come watch her child while she went to work at the daycare center…