Working moms vs Stay at home moms

Katherine - posted on 05/08/2011 ( 186 moms have responded )

65,405

232

Last week a study came out which showed that working moms have sicker kids than stay-at-home moms. Almost immediately, the stay-at-home moms turned the study into a 500-page scrapbook project which they used to pummel working moms with. Then working moms retaliated by sending their secretaries out to staple all of the stay-at-home moms' nostrils shut. Or at least, I suspect that’s the kind of “mommy-war” bullshit that the media probably expected would happen.



In real life, however, almost everyone ignored the study because both the stay-at-home moms and the working moms were too damn busy to waste their time criticizing the personal decisions of fellow mothers. In fact, pretty much the only people who paid attention to this at all were the mothers-who-are-way-too-concerned-about-what-everyone-else-is-doing-because-it-distracts-them-from-all-the-shit-they’re-personally-failing-at.



Still, there are some new mothers who have fallen for the ridiculous idea that mothers are at war with each other, and who feel conflicted about making the decision to go back to work or to stay at home after having children, so I’m going to give you the lowdown of both options so you can decide for yourself.



The PROS of being a stay-at-home mom: You don’t have to shower until noon. If your child is under 6 months old, you can watch zombie movies and The Big Lebowski all day and they totally won’t care. Pajamas are your new uniform. You’re always home to sign for packages. You get to see all the cool things your kid does all day. Your kid isn’t exposed to the petri-dish of germs that is daycare. You feel like Donna Reed. You don’t have to deal with that bitch at work anymore. Your partner thinks you’re amazing. You have the quiet satisfaction of doing what’s right for your children.



The CONS of being a stay-at-home mom: You don’t have time to shower ever. If your child is over 6 months old, you have to watch really shitty kids TV all the time and you have weird sex dreams about Thomas the Train. All of your pajamas have bodily fluids on them. And not the good kind. You accidentally show your boobs to the mailman/cable guy/next door neighbor. You realize that your kid is boring and/or an asshole and you can never escape from them. You want to knife Donna Reed for making it look so easy. You irrationally shout, “STAY-AT-HOME MOMS ARE WORKING MOMS” every time you read an article like this and then you shake your head and wonder how you got like this. You feel so lonely that you actually start to miss that bitch at work. Your partner wants to rest after a long day of work and they don’t understand that you need to rest too and they say something like, “Why? What did you do all day? This house is a wreck” and then you have to go to jail for stabbing them in the shoulder. You find that prison is a pleasant break from being a stay-at-home mom. You secretly worry that you’re making the wrong decision.







The PROS of being a working mom: You get to escape from the insanity of motherhood for 8 hours a day. You have more disposable income that you can spend on family vacations and classes. You can afford to put your child in a Portuguese-immersion daycare that will give him a huge advantage in school. You have an experienced nanny/child-care provider to give you advice and help raise your child. You can belt out that “I can bring home the bacon” song and totally mean it. You are able to keep up an active social life, which makes you a happier, more focused mom when you're home. You have the quiet satisfaction of having both a successful career and family.



The CONS of being a working mom: You miss eight hours a day of your child’s life. You spend your entire paycheck on concerts to see The Wiggles. Your child is fluent in a language you can’t even speak. You have a nanny/childcare provider who is constantly telling you how to raise your child and occasionally your child calls her “mommy.” When “Cat’s in the Cradle” comes on the radio, you fall to pieces and everyone in your office hears you crying the ugly cry. Your kid is sick every other week from all the germs at daycare and your boss makes you feel like shit for missing work to take care of her. You end up using all your vacation days getting thrown up on in the pediatrician’s office. Everyone in your house gets lice. Twice. You’re so exhausted that you can’t accomplish anything and you feel like you’re failing as a parent and as an employee. You secretly worry that you’re making the wrong decision.



In the end, only one universal truth remains: You’re going to doubt yourself no matter what you do, but whatever decision you make is probably the best one for your particular family. Also, eventually everyone gets lice. That’s another universal truth but not necessarily one anyone ever talks about.



PS: If you’re a working mom still pissed off about the sick-kid study, then you need to take a deep breath and calm the hell down. Yes, the study implies that children of working moms are four times more likely to be poisoned but that doesn’t mean you’re the one poisoning them. Honestly, who has the time? I barely have time to cook dinner at night, much less plan a poisoning. My guess is that your children are being poisoned by stay-at-home moms who are retaliating after having discovered that you are secretly encouraging your sick children to lick all the playground equipment just to level the sick-kid playing field. Honestly, I can’t say I blame them.



PPS: Dear media: The paragraph right above this one? That’s how you start a mommy-war. Fucking amateurs.

This conversation has been closed to further comments

Join Circle of Moms

Sign up for Circle of Moms and be a part of this community! Membership is just one click away.

Join Circle of Moms

186 Comments

View replies by

Stifler's - posted on 05/09/2011

15,141

154

Erm. I'm lazy and stay home with one child and sit on my ass heaps, I'm on Facebook right now and no no washing is on and neither is the dishwasher. Once I finish uni and start working while the kids are at school and go to after school care or whatever I will be buying nicer clothes and an SS instead of an SV6. How does that make me a bad parent because I want what I want as long as my kids don't suffer? Pffft!

Charlie - posted on 05/09/2011

11,203

111

It doesnt have to be a paying Job to keep your payments it can be voluntary .

Johnny - posted on 05/09/2011

8,686

26

I'm a part-time working mom & I'll be going back full-time in a month. I work to pay the bills. The only reason that I can afford to work part-time is because my parents have been caring for my daughter at no charge. If I had to pay for daycare, I'd have had to be back at work full-time. It's certainly not for luxuries. We won't be able to afford to send my daughter to pre-school if I don't go back to work full-time, so I will be and she'll be starting a pre-school/daycare in the fall. I'm sad about it, but mostly for me. I'll miss the mommy work.

Aside from moms who are on maternity leave, I don't actually know any full-time SAHM's in my real life. When I was a kid, my mom was a SAHM, but even then, she was in the minority. Most of my friend's moms worked. A few of my friends are like me, and have been able to manage part-time work, but most of us will have to go back full-time at some point. I noticed when my daughter hit 1 year old that the activities I took her to were suddenly full of grandparents, babysitters, nannies, or moms still on mat leave with younger kids. I guess with our cost of living, it's just not a viable thing to stay at home here for anyone but the fairly rich.

That all being said, I've never thought of SAHM work as being a lazy or easy job. Frankly, on my days at home with my daughter, I'm busier and more tired at the end of the day than I am when I work. Anyone who thinks it's easy has never done it IMO. I suppose there are some women out there who sit in front of the tv all day watching soaps, let the house fall apart and the kids run wild. But I think while that may be the stereotype, it's rarely the reality. Most SAHMs work their butts off to look after their children and their home.

I will say though, as I think about going back to work full-time, it is a bit overwhelming. Even though I will not have the childcare work to do, all the household chores will still need to be done just the same. I will have 18 hours a week less to cook, clean, and grocery shop than I had before. That frightens me. I do think that working moms may have it a bit harder in 2 ways, time availibiility/management and the pleasure of spending time with their kids. I know I'm really going to miss my time with my daughter a lot.

Toni - posted on 05/09/2011

3,671

14

I'm a SAHM and I hope I can still be a semi SAHM at the very least when my kids are school aged - in that I will drop them for school and collect them after school and maybe work in the middle. I think it's important that parents do what they feel is right for their families with regards to working or not.

As for children being sicker - that depends upon so many more factors than whether mum works or not, including how much interaction children have with other people. Not all SAHM don't go out - I would go mad if we stayed in everyday :-)

Laura Zoey - posted on 05/09/2011

9,267

169

What about sahms who homeschool :) that's not being lazy I'm sure! Anyways, I feel like my only goal in life is to be an amazing wife and mom. Yup that's it. I'd love to be a lc in the future when kids are grown but for the majority of my life all I'm wanting is wife and mom. So for me that means I'd never feel happy working. It is possible to live on one income. It depends on the income, the lifestyle, the geographical area, etc. But it isn't impossible! I think it's every humans responsibility to find what they need out of life and go for it. If someone needs to work, then work, if they need to volunteer, do it! And if they need to be with their kids all day then that should be ok too.
And I don't feel like I'm being judged because I'm a sahm who never went to college and never had a career. I'm not trying to please the general public, I'm simply doing what I feel is best for me and my kids.
So I stay home, my husband works, I'm going to homeschool because for me I'm not ok with others helping me raise my kids.
That's what I want out of life, but I think everyone wants different things so there's no way we all can come to an agreement as to which life style is best.

Desiree - posted on 05/09/2011

898

17

We are all intitled to be lazy, who else does the things we do, Nanny, Nurse, Doctor, Human resources, Teacher, Politician, Police Officer, Dance instructor, Fitness Instructor, Cook, Baker, Cleaner, Washer, Tutor, Actor (boy can we act we need an Oscar) Lie detector, Disciplinarian, What other person who is not a mom can wear that many hats without getting paid for it, and still do it willingly and lovingly.

Sarah - posted on 05/09/2011

5,465

31

And I'm a lazy working Mum! ;)

Chatty - posted on 05/09/2011

2

0

I'm a lazy SAHM, what of it?! ;)

Kelly - posted on 05/09/2011

3,338

12

Krista, that wasn't my point. She said I was lazy because I choose to be a sahm even though my only son is in school. I was making the point that *I* have no reason to work outside the home other than designer clothes and a bigger house, and that choosing to stay home over working does not make me lazy. It would be silly for me to work when all *I* would use the $$ on would be child care and material things, just so people like her would not think I am lazy.

I know most working mothers work because the have to, and very few are working for designer clothes and fancy houses, but that would not be my situation, yet in choosing to give up those things to stay home, I am somehow being lazy.

...I hope that clears it up, I have a lot of respect for working moms, and I was one for the first 3 years of J's life, so I know how hard it is, and I know what most working moms are working for. That said, even when I worked, I didn't think sahm's were "lazy" and now that I stay home, I don't think working moms are materialistic or less maternal.

Desiree - posted on 05/09/2011

898

17

Hey to the thought that working mom's don't volunteer at the school that rubbish. I work a full day 7.30 to 16.30. And I spend my life doing things for the school, more than some SAHM's and it's always the same moms for everything. Last year I stayed up through the night to complete costumes for the childrens school play. never mind that I had been sewing for 6 weeks. Sorry work is work whether you are home or not. A mothers job is never not busy, and throwing stones at each other and trying to show which one of us has more estrogen than the other. Please we are all in the same boat doing the most difficult job in the world.

Isobel - posted on 05/09/2011

9,849

0

not that I WANT to be taking finance :(

Isobel - posted on 05/09/2011

9,849

0

oh...if I weren't in school, I'd be working...not because I want to be able to afford plastic surgery (which I do) but because I think I'd lose my shit if I didn't get to do something *I* wanted to do

Krista - posted on 05/09/2011

12,562

16

Can we PLEASE put to bed that crap about how moms who work outside the home are doing so because they want designer clothes or a big house? Please?

You know what I'm wearing right now? A shirt that I got at a second-hand store, and a pair of khakis that I got at Old Navy. My purse was $20. Our house is a good size, but not ginormous -- a smidge over 1700 sq ft.

I work, because there's no way we'd be able to live on my husband's income alone, unless we wanted to live in a beat-up trailer and subsist solely off of Mister Noodle.

As far as what other parents choose to do, that's their beeswax -- I couldn't care less.

But yeah, I get pretty irked when I keep hearing about how moms are only working because they're superficial, materialistic twats. The vast majority of mothers I know work outside the home, and trust me, none of us are trucking around designer bags or going for weekly pedicures.

Marisa - posted on 05/09/2011

370

48

I love being a SAHM, and I no problem with moms going to work no one should criticize someone who makes choices for what is best for their families.

Isobel - posted on 05/09/2011

9,849

0

yeah, most of the SAHPs I know volunteer in the school to some degree (I do safe arrival one day a week and I'm the lice lady...don't be jealous).

Even if I weren't a student, I would hardly call it a lazy life...I wake up first thing in the morning, make breakfast, pack lunch, come home and do laundry (even if I do sit on my arse for a couple of hours...in a 24 hour day I think I deserve a break at SOME point) then I head out pick up the kids take them to their after-school lessons, bring them home, do the extra work that I've provided because they were falling behind in one subject each, then make dinner, eat, read to them and bed).

whew...yes, I feel justified in hanging out for an hour or two doing nothing when I don't have any homework to do.

Kelly - posted on 05/09/2011

3,338

12

I don't know what you are talking about "the government taking away payment for school aged kids." What is that?
I do not get any government payments, nor did I get them before my son started school. I get a $400/year tax credit for having a kid, it is not a payment, it is an income reduction--basically means I can earn $400/yr that I do not have to pay income tax on b/c I have a kid. You get that whether you are a sahm or working mom, and until your kid is 18 years old.

You can think I'm lazy if you want to, and I'll think what I think about you. Why, exactly, should I go out and get a job? I would just like one good reason that working would be better for my son than being here for him.

I guess it would be nice to buy designer cloths, but I'm fine with Macy's & Target. Maybe a bigger house? Nah, don't want to spend the extra time cleaning it--oh wait, I have all the time in the world to clean....am I lazy because I live in a small house too?

Teresa - posted on 05/09/2011

10,689

29

I'm so glad I don't need anyone else's approval to live my life the way I choose. What a sad existence that would be.... IMO, of course.

Jenn - posted on 05/09/2011

675

1

Rather ridiculous to judge anyone for staying home OR working. I should hope all mothers do what is best not only for their family but for themselves as well. An unhappy working mom or an unhappy SAHM is not going to bode well for the family overall.

Mel - posted on 05/09/2011

5,539

58

ok lets just say I disagree with anyone staying at home then. Im way too tired for this one atm. Have fun guys

Jodi - posted on 05/09/2011

20,666

36

Mel, you can't set the criteria. Can you see this is what you are doing? You are lazy if you have school age kids and don't work. Oh, but it's ok if you are volunteering. It's different if you have 4 kids not 2. It's totally ok if you are also helping out with a business. If one of your kids is disabled, that's different too.



My point is.....you have no right to judge. You have been presented with several situations where you have changed your mind. Rather than judging first and fixing it later......how about being accepting (and even being supportive) of SAHMs with school age children....until you DO know all the circumstances? Because right now, you are making the broad judgement and then backpedalling. Not cool really.

Mel - posted on 05/09/2011

5,539

58

I missed that bit about school volunteer, if you are doing that great. Thats fantastic. But as said Im reffering to people who dont do anything or do very little

Mel - posted on 05/09/2011

5,539

58

Why would the government take payments away for mothers of school aged children then? WIth one child I really dont think there is an excuse, Im sorry if my opinion upsets you but that is the way I feel. My daughters daycare worker has 4 kids yojnger being 2 yrs old shes been working since that girl was 4 months and only JUST stopped breast feeding (her work is a home daycare too obviously so its full on) and she studies as well. That is someone I admire not someone who stays at home with ONE school aged child. Im sorry if that bothers you but that is my opinion

Jenn - posted on 05/09/2011

675

1

I've only been a SAHM and some days it is easy, most days it kicks my ass. My daughter is in a charter school that relies heavily on SAHM or SAHD for volunteering (charters get 40% less than public school funding) and it is the same moms/dads at every school function and event. My other child is in private preschool 2 days a week which also requires quite a bit of parent participation. And then there's a house to keep, animals to feed (poor creatures would starve without me to remember they need nourishment), children and husband to tend to (who would also starve if they didn't have me to remind them that they need nourishment). Oh, and my increasingly dependent mother-in-law and other elderly in-laws. Are my kids healthier? They were amazingly healthy...at least until my oldest started "big" school. She had strep twice this year, a stomach virus and flu. I was beating myself up more that my magical breastmilk from 4 years earlier had run its course with her!

I don't think it really matters if a mom works or not when it comes to her child's health. What matters is what the child is fed, how much sleep he/she gets, the amount of affection the child receives, the routine that's in place for the child's best interest (not mom's) and overall care. Kids either get exposed to other kid crap early on in daycare or later on in elementary school!

Jodi - posted on 05/09/2011

20,666

36

"Without SAHM with school age children several parts of our community would not function , It saddens me the little recognition and appreaciation they get for their hard work for everyone in our community ."



Oh, mums who volunteer get PLENTY of recognition....when those who don't ever volunteer have something to bitch about. Sorry, but that is a bit of a bone of contention for most of us who try to help out. If you want to complain about it, fine, but don't complain if you never get involved. Because those who help out very rarely get a thanks from those who don't, and we are in there raising money for things for ALL of the children.



I am one of those mothers who got involved because they were going to CANCEL a program for the children for lack of volunteers. That's right CANCEL. It was a beneficial gross motor program but they need parents to help in order to run it.



To put others down for being SAHMs is to have a total lack of understanding for the reasons. I do NOT criticise those who choose to go back to work, because I have done that too, so I have been on both sides of the fence, but it really bugs the SHIT out of me when someone can make sweeping statements about SAHMs of school age children being lazy. ESPECIALLY when that person HAS no school age children so cannot possibly have a clue.



Actually it bugs the shit out of me when ANYONE makes sweeping statements about anyone's choices in this respect because we ALL have very valid reasons for the choices we make, and every single ONE of them is the right choice for our families in some way or another.

Kelly - posted on 05/09/2011

3,338

12

Mel, I would be one of the "lazy" sahm's you describe--I have ONE school aged child, and that's all :)

I can assure you, I'm not "lazy." I volunteer at school nearly 15 hours a week. This year, we raised $600,000 for our school (almost $80k per student). Funds don't magically appear, they take a lot of effort to get--fairs, muffin sales, dinners, plays, card sales, school store, spirit days, car washes, business partnerships, etc. all have to be staffed, organized, and stocked.
I also come to school to read SEEDS to my son's class and do a craft one Friday a month.
On top of that, I have my usual cleaning, about 2 hours a day, laundry, shopping, my own appointments--hair, nails, doctors, etc.--I file our billing (it's taken out automatically, but we keep files and budgets), and make appointments for J and John.

All of that is done before 2pm. Then, I pick up J, snack, homework, Taekwondo, dinner and clean up before baseball on game/practice nights, then get him ready for bed and read his stories to him.
At 9pm, I prepare lunches, book bags, and briefcases for the next day, make sure my husband's suit and shirt are steamed (sometimes the cleaner leaves creases), go over the calendar for the next day, and take a little time for myself to read or whatever.

Yes, I do take time to socialize and "sit on my bum" a couple times a week (now is one of them). I spend about an hour a day doing something JUST for me--messing around COM, brunch with my friends, fun shopping--but I will not have anyone tell me that taking an hour for me makes me "lazy" just because my son is in school and I choose to be home with him.

One question: How is being involved with his education and present in his life setting a bad example for him?
My mother worked her a** off when I was a child--I literally saw her about once a week. I know she had to, but I barely know her, and I will not have that for my son. I worked hard before I had him so that I could support myself as a sahm. I do have an income from investments, but I do not, and choose never to, work outside my home.

Sarah - posted on 05/09/2011

5,465

31

I've seen this post before too :)

I work part time which suits me just fine for the moment. I didn't go back to work until the kids were 2yrs old (ish), for me personally, I couldn't imagine going back any earlier than that.

As for kids of working Mum's being ill more often.......I can't really comment today as I've had to miss work today because my youngest has a stomach bug! ;)

Desiree - posted on 05/09/2011

898

17

Now that i have completely finished dissolving in a fit of giggles and having my own staff stare at me as though I am insane, i ca compose myself to say, these damned studies are probably written by men or career women who don't have kids or a clue of how it is. Whether I am home all day or working all day the one fact remains I am to tired to actually care who thinks what of me. Even with pre-teens your life is never your own, the next time I will have time all to myself and my home exactly the way I want it is when my kids move out, but then I will end up being a Gran so I will never again have my home the way I want it, but I get to give the kids back and that is something I can dream about. If we all did the same things I think the husbands would go insane. I would love to be a stay at home mom, but I don't believe it is any easier than being a working mom either.

Katherine - posted on 05/09/2011

65,405

232

@ Erin, no I don't think this is old.

Without SAHM with school age children several parts of our community would not function , It saddens me the little recognition and appreaciation they get for their hard work for everyone in our community .

SO true Loureen. Who would go to PTO meetings? Board meetings, fundraisers?

Charlie - posted on 05/09/2011

11,203

111

" It is the countless contribution of time and effort on the part of her and other sahms of school-aged kids that enriches the school for ALL of the students. As a community, we need these sahms for all of the activities and programs that add so much to the experiences of our school-aged kids. "

I agree Mary , I never remember my mother having time to rest between doing school and sport duties , cooking , cleaning , shopping on top of her voluntary jobs with other community groups .

Without SAHM with school age children several parts of our community would not function , It saddens me the little recognition and appreaciation they get for their hard work for everyone in our community .

Mary - posted on 05/09/2011

3,292

31

I guess I would be the example to disprove this. I worked up until my daughter was just shy of her second birthday. Now, she wasn't in daycare, my husband and I finagled our schedules so that, with the exception of two afternoons/week with my dad, she was home with one of us. In those first two years, the girl was sick only once; at 10 months she got an ear infection because of excessive drooling with teething.

Just before her second birthday, I stopped working. Now, I had the time (and energy) to participate in a host of mommy-and-me toddler activities. At least three days a week, we have scheduled activities in the morning, and then various impromptu playdates or outings. In the past 6 months, Molly (and myself) had at least 4 run-of-the-mill upper respiratory infections courtesy of all of our interactions with those other sahms and their kids.

It has nothing to do mom's employment status - it has to do with their level of interaction with other kids. In my (perhaps unique) situation, my daughter's exposure to other kids went up dramatically once I became a sahm.

As for the sahm with school aged kids...my sister's kids are 6 and 8. I have never met a busier woman. Between shuttling them back and forth to school, and all of the volunteering she does at their school (school field trips, lunch mother stuff, etc) as well as shuttling them to their various activities, and monitoring/helping with the staggering amount of homework they now get in 3rd grade, she rarely has a free moment to chat. She also does the school's yearbook. This entails a weekly, after-school "class" that she moderates with the eighth-graders while her kids are in after-care at the school, as well as attendance of all school assemblies/activities to take pictures, and countless hours putting things together after her kids have gone to bed. It is the countless contribution of time and effort on the part of her and other sahms of school-aged kids that enriches the school for ALL of the students. As a community, we need these sahms for all of the activities and programs that add so much to the experiences of our school-aged kids.

Casey - posted on 05/09/2011

633

37

I wouldn't want to be a working mummy for anything I love the fact that I get to be at home with my babies everyday and I have never missed any special event in their lives, yes money is a bit tighter and we can't go away on holidays or eat out but it's worth the sacrifice.
I don't think badly of any mum that has to go back to work because alot of them just don't have a choice they have to work to help provide for the family, but it doesn't shock me that the kids of working mums get sicker then kids of stay at hom mums and the main reason behind that is probably daycare, of course parents are still going to send their kids to daycare when their sick they probably don't have much choice so therefore it goes around and everyone there would catch it.

Sal - posted on 05/08/2011

1,754

16

oh and mel, as i'm sure you will come to realise with a little more mummying under your belt that no mum sits on her but at home all day no matter how old the kids are and besides what i do with my but is my business, just as what you do with yours in none of mine

Sal - posted on 05/08/2011

1,754

16

i haven't read anything yet BUT i doubt on is sicker than the other really, just that for working mums a sickish kid is an issue (or a good reason for a day off) for an at home mum it isn't much different to anyother day, yes at home kids go out all the time (well i do and the mums i know do) so that is not a lot of diff to me

Stifler's - posted on 05/08/2011

15,141

154

Being a SAHM doesn't mean I don't go out. I have playgroup, other friends to visit, shopping to do. Plenty of pathogens out there. My friends and I babysit each others kids so we can get hair done and stuff. It definitely doesn't mean I stay home all day cleaning even though that is a large part of my days picking up toys and doing laundry and dishes and making food.

Constance - posted on 05/08/2011

2,651

24

@ Mel, If you aren't happy then your not happy. It doesn't make you a bad person. I am sorry that IMO you don't have the support at home that you need to feel good. If staying home isn't for you then it is ok. I hope everything worls out for you. But you have to be happy to take of you. If you aren't happy then you can't be the mom that you want to be. Good luck, you will find you balance.

Mel - posted on 05/08/2011

5,539

58

I guess my views couold be tainted from everything in my life. And yeah come to think of it I do have one friend, whose in her 30s ad SAHM who works her butt off day and night, so I do realise not all of them are lazy. That will be my break for the year, going ot her wedding in Bali in November! Originally my husband said only 2 kids, then since we wanted to try for a boy he said 3, but the condition of going for more then just 2 kids was that I stayed at home, he said theres no way this hosue would keep in order f I was working and we had 3 or 4 kids. I said if thats what it takes for you to want to have more babies Ill agree right now. I retracted that soon after I came to a point whre there was no social interaction for me, the first time being last week my husband was away all week interstate, and I visted friends, my mums work, went out shops friends came over and took the girls to the park while I cleaned the house top to bottom etc. I stil had a bad time of it because of my husband being away I got into depression mode at night, which landed me more sleep deprived because I was upse half the night, thats not the point but I think everything I feel stems from being at home too much. Since I had my 2nd child Ive rarely ventured out. I realised the kids needed time out so did I, but it jst seemed to hard, even to go down the road , for a really long time. I had to travel an hour to see my friends last week but I did it. It was a pain in the arse keeping them in order at someone elses place but I managed it. I guess I feel I keep telling my husband would you rather I am severly low and depressed because Im at home or that Im able to get out. Talking to people and being around people makes me alot happier, and I hate it when I get to the point where Im so bitter and angry at everything even stupid things because I am not getting out enough. SO yeah I guess my opinions come from everything around me atm

Erin - posted on 05/08/2011

6,569

25

Is this blog post old Katherine? I think I''ve seen it before.

Anyway, I don't know why people care so much about how other families run their lives. I really don't. Working FT, working PT or SAH are all personal decisions that involve many variables. Some people make choices for their families that I wouldn't dream of making for mine, but it's just not an issue to me. I can simply say to myself 'wow, that's not something I would ever do but I hope it works out' and leave it at that.

Teresa - posted on 05/08/2011

10,689

29

Everyone's views tend to come from what they know. That is normal. My mom was mostly a working or at school mom. I HATED it and vowed I would never be away from my kids like that. Which would be one of the reasons I've never wanted 'more' than to be a SAHM.

I will actually fully admit that I AM rather 'lazy', but that has nothing to do w/ being a SAHM. My issues go way deeper than that.

Vegemite - posted on 05/08/2011

916

0

oh and my toilet trained 3yr old just crapped all over his bedroom floor carpet instead of walking the 2meters down the hall to the toilet. Yeah this is easier than working. Maybe he did it because i was being a lazy SAHM sitting on the computer.

Vegemite - posted on 05/08/2011

916

0

Oh man I think I weed a little what a funny.

Well I've just started working 2 days a week and the days i work are way more cruisy than the days I'm at home but I can see how working full time and having kids would be very hard.

Constance - posted on 05/08/2011

2,651

24

It has taken years to get my mom to help out a little. Hell my husband and I just got a week away without any kids for the first time since our first baby.

Constance - posted on 05/08/2011

2,651

24

I love being with my kids. But I would go absolutly insane if I didn't do things that didn't involve them. Everybody needs an outlet even SAHM.

Charlie - posted on 05/08/2011

11,203

111

See I have interests outside of the home , thats what keeps me from going crazy .....surfing , friends , the gym ....It's not realistic to be expected to only be with the kids , talking about kids or thinking about the kids all day long .

Constance - posted on 05/08/2011

2,651

24

Mel, You will get it worked out. Are you afraid that you are going end being forced to do something you are not comfortable with? I am not trying to be nasty or make you feel bad. I just seems like there is more behind this whole post.

Mel - posted on 05/08/2011

5,539

58

it would only be part time. No more then a day or 2 at this stage. Only when my youngest hits 12 months and begins daycare. Daycare for her to learn to interact with others and work for me to get me out the house so in theory it sounds good as long as I can keep up with the house without having to work all night

Kate CP - posted on 05/08/2011

8,942

36

Ah, yes. I sit on my ass all day long. I get the imp ready for school, then I clean the house, then I do mountains of laundry. Then I have to go grocery shopping. Then I usually have to take my MIL to some doctor's appointment. Then I have to go pick up the imp. Then I have to make her a snack and finish laundry. Then I get to make dinner. Then I get to clean up dinner, get her bathed and tucked in. Sometimes I have time to brush the dog (which is something I should do every day since she's got really long hair) and, you know, SHOWER.

But this was BEFORE I had a 3 month old baby. Now I get to do all those things but I also get to stop every 2-3 hours to nurse him PLUS all the other times he needs a diaper change, a bath, some face time, some cuddles...

Oh yea. I'm on my ass ALL DAY LONG.

Jodi - posted on 05/08/2011

20,666

36

"I just feel for me I need to do something outside of my children"

Being a SAHM doesn't mean not doing something outside of your children either.....I just wanted to make that clear. For some people it is work, for others it is their hobbies, volunteer work, sport, whatever it may be.

Charlie - posted on 05/08/2011

11,203

111

"Im not sure how it will go working because my husband is worried about having to do too much around the house, but we will have to see. "

You can always start off part time and see how it goes :)

Mel - posted on 05/08/2011

5,539

58

I cant help the way I feel, I may have tried, but on this one, I cant seem to change my views. But my views may be based on what I have seen in these few people yes. I dont know what other SAHMs do with their day. This is a daily fight for me, with my hubby so I guess i feel strong on it, because we fight because his mother stayed at home where as my mother worked

Mel - posted on 05/08/2011

5,539

58

Im not sure how it will go working because my husband is worried about having to do too much around the house, but we will have to see. But I respect your opinion, I just feel for me I need to do something outside of my children