elizabear: (Default)
elizabear ([personal profile] elizabear) wrote2010-07-13 04:28 pm
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excellent article about what stay-at-home parents actually do all day

[Note: not to say working parents don't do a lot of the things SAHs do, but it's different when you do it ALL DAY. EVERY DAY.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/22/AR2007052201554.html?referrer=facebook

TELL ME ABOUT IT ®
By Carolyn Hax
Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Carolyn:

Best friend has child. Her: exhausted, busy, no time for self, no time for me, etc. Me (no kids): Wow. Sorry. What'd you do today? Her: Park, play group . . .

Okay. I've done Internet searches, I've talked to parents. I don't get it. What do stay-at-home moms do all day? Please no lists of library, grocery store, dry cleaners . . . I do all those things, too, and I don't do them EVERY DAY. I guess what I'm asking is: What is a typical day and why don't moms have time for a call or e-mail? I work and am away from home nine hours a day (plus a few late work events) and I manage to get it all done. I'm feeling like the kid is an excuse to relax and enjoy -- not a bad thing at all -- but if so, why won't my friend tell me the truth? Is this a peeing contest ("My life is so much harder than yours")? What's the deal? I've got friends with and without kids and all us child-free folks get the same story and have the same questions.

Tacoma, Wash.



Relax and enjoy. You're funny.

Or you're lying about having friends with kids.

Or you're taking them at their word that they actually have kids, because you haven't personally been in the same room with them.

Internet searches?

I keep wavering between giving you a straight answer and giving my forehead some keyboard. To claim you want to understand, while in the same breath implying that the only logical conclusions are that your mom-friends are either lying or competing with you, is disingenuous indeed.

So, since it's validation you seem to want, the real answer is what you get. In list form. When you have young kids, your typical day is: constant attention, from getting them out of bed, fed, clean, dressed; to keeping them out of harm's way; to answering their coos, cries, questions; to having two arms and carrying one kid, one set of car keys, and supplies for even the quickest trips, including the latest-to-be-declared-essential piece of molded plastic gear; to keeping them from unshelving books at the library; to enforcing rest times; to staying one step ahead of them lest they get too hungry, tired or bored, any one of which produces the kind of checkout-line screaming that gets the checkout line shaking its head.

It's needing 45 minutes to do what takes others 15.

It's constant vigilance, constant touch, constant use of your voice, constant relegation of your needs to the second tier.

It's constant scrutiny and second-guessing from family and friends, well-meaning and otherwise. It's resisting constant temptation to seek short-term relief at everyone's long-term expense.

It's doing all this while concurrently teaching virtually everything -- language, manners, safety, resourcefulness, discipline, curiosity, creativity. Empathy. Everything.

It's also a choice, yes. And a joy. But if you spent all day, every day, with this brand of joy, and then, when you got your first 10 minutes to yourself, wanted to be alone with your thoughts instead of calling a good friend, a good friend wouldn't judge you, complain about you to mutual friends, or marvel how much more productively she uses her time. Either make a sincere effort to understand or keep your snit to yourself.
hel_ana: (Default)

[personal profile] hel_ana 2010-07-13 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
It's needing 45 minutes to do what takes others 15.

Oy.. this. Except that I wish I could get it done in 45 minutes.

Thanks for posting this, E.

[identity profile] elizabear.livejournal.com 2010-07-13 08:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I kind of felt the 45 mins was a lowball estimate, too.

[identity profile] bess.livejournal.com 2010-07-13 10:37 pm (UTC)(link)
yeah....

[identity profile] tashabear.livejournal.com 2010-07-14 12:06 am (UTC)(link)
When I was living with a man who had a 6-year-old son, I could count on a trip to the grocery store that would take me 15 minutes taking 1.5 hours if Matthew was along. The cereal aisle alone was good for 30 minutes, till I realized he was choosing cereal based on the picture on the box.

[identity profile] cbpotts.livejournal.com 2010-07-14 09:24 am (UTC)(link)
I get this all the time, because I'm a SAHM, and people say, "I don't know what I'd do all day. I'd get so bored!" Even if they have kids! Even if they have suddenly a block of time to be home, they view home as a place to escape from -- but then they whine about having to spend all this money for stuff that SAHM's do as a matter of course -- make lunch, shorten the pants, etc, never no mind the extras like the garden or crafting/art. I chose being a SAHM because it is a higher quality of life for me and my entire family -- and yes it is a lot of work, but damn it all appears to be invisible. (And explaining you are both a SAHM and the family's primary breadwinner, and have been so for decades? You can just watch their brains explode -- but no, I don't do anything, all day long. And I'm a bad example to other women, you know?

Look, a button. It seems to have been pushed *grin*

[identity profile] bunnyjadwiga.livejournal.com 2010-07-14 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
At the end of my 8 weeks of maternal leave I knew I was NOT cut out to be a stay at home mother. Maybe a work-at-home mom to people old enough to wipe their own bottoms, but that's about my limit.

Yesterday, it took 2 of us to tag-team one relatively cheerful toddler (admittedly he has Coxsackie virus and impetigo, but part of that is that he slept *more* than usual...)