P
paradoxy
Guest
My, I don’t know where to start…
I also would like to know how to get rid of the “poor me” attitude, but I miss quite the opposite things - going out into the world, being active, working, seeing grown people I could talk to… everyone has their own “poor me” circumstances…
My husband and I always sort of agreed that I’d be working and he’d be a SAHD, b/c that is just ideal for us - he LOVES being at home, and I feel imprisoned if I’m not running around all the time; he finished high school and is a musician doing gigs several times a week, and I’m in grad school and we live off my scholarship, basically. I was also working before we had the baby and he did the housework - and it was just perfect for both of us, and I sure respected him.
I just hadn’t taken into consideration the fact, previously unknown to me, that babies need their mothers all the time and need to be breastfed quite often
. So now I’m a SAHM, until my baby can be separated from me for at least a while. We can scrape by and really don’t need much. My baby is still almost exclusively breastfed and we dress her in hand-me-downs. I only resent my husband b/c he CAN leave the house and go anywhere he wants - not that he actually does it too much
- and I can’t.
Some things are God-ordained - like babies being breastfed - but I don’t think others are - like husbands being the sole providers. In the country I live in, it has been virtually impossible for a family to live on a single income for at least the last 70 years (but women get a whole year off for each baby) - are all men in my country worthless? Would God allow this situation if the first-half-of-20thC-US model was the only moral one? My mom worked, and so did my grandmothers, and my great-grandmother, and no one thought the men less worthy of respect.
I spent my entire conscious childhood in poverty although my parents were both highly trained working professionals - those were just the circumstances in my country at the time. And I’m grateful for that - I learned a lot of valuable lessons. Like: “you are never secure and should not put your trust in material things”; and “you shouldn’t value people based on the amount of money they make” (the only rich people were war profiteers and criminals).
IMO, money is a silly reason to get upset about, but I guess everyone needs their excuse for the “poor me” feelings
If you find out how to get rid of those, please let me know!
God bless!
I also would like to know how to get rid of the “poor me” attitude, but I miss quite the opposite things - going out into the world, being active, working, seeing grown people I could talk to… everyone has their own “poor me” circumstances…
My husband and I always sort of agreed that I’d be working and he’d be a SAHD, b/c that is just ideal for us - he LOVES being at home, and I feel imprisoned if I’m not running around all the time; he finished high school and is a musician doing gigs several times a week, and I’m in grad school and we live off my scholarship, basically. I was also working before we had the baby and he did the housework - and it was just perfect for both of us, and I sure respected him.
I just hadn’t taken into consideration the fact, previously unknown to me, that babies need their mothers all the time and need to be breastfed quite often
Some things are God-ordained - like babies being breastfed - but I don’t think others are - like husbands being the sole providers. In the country I live in, it has been virtually impossible for a family to live on a single income for at least the last 70 years (but women get a whole year off for each baby) - are all men in my country worthless? Would God allow this situation if the first-half-of-20thC-US model was the only moral one? My mom worked, and so did my grandmothers, and my great-grandmother, and no one thought the men less worthy of respect.
I spent my entire conscious childhood in poverty although my parents were both highly trained working professionals - those were just the circumstances in my country at the time. And I’m grateful for that - I learned a lot of valuable lessons. Like: “you are never secure and should not put your trust in material things”; and “you shouldn’t value people based on the amount of money they make” (the only rich people were war profiteers and criminals).
IMO, money is a silly reason to get upset about, but I guess everyone needs their excuse for the “poor me” feelings
If you find out how to get rid of those, please let me know!
God bless!