piercj2 said:
Women are not intrinciscally motivated to gain money power, ect, and are naturally submissive, which allows for them to give in to big decicsions and give things up. However they still do well and go far in school, because thier natural tendency to listen and follow directions
Really? See, I always thought that women make sacrifices because their husbands refuse to do so. I mean, if you don't have kids, you can just refuse to pick up after your husband and cook for him, etc, if he doesn't do his part and pitch in as well. But as soon as kids enter into the equation, men (not all men...the dinguses of the world) know that a woman will just give up and do the chores out of love for her children...
not because of her 'natural tendency to listen and follow directions" or natural submissiveness or other such bull.
And believe me, and I care a
lot about money, because I know it is the key to my indepence...it means I will never have to rely on alimony or child support or have to defer to my bread-winner husband when he's a jerk because I'm afraid of losing the roof over my head. I plan to hire a cleaning service and a cook so that I don't have to waste the time I have off from work on house chores, and can instead spend that time with my family.
Additionally, having a mother who worked as a research scientist and quit to take better care of me when I was a kid has made me vow to
never quit my career to become a stay-at-home mom. When my mom quit her job, she lost contact with her passion (research), her friends (young people she had things in common with that didn't include daycare, diaper genies, or breastfeeding), and her indentification as a smart, ambitious, independent woman....and instead her entire life became about raising me well. That is an
enormous amount of pressure to put on your kids, to know that you are the only true priority in your mother's life. It made me feel guilty, pressured, and smothered, and this quickly turned into resentment...I was mad at my mom for quiting her job for me, so we'd fight and I'd feel guilty and this would make me mad all over again. Our relationship was absolutely terrible until she went back to work...now we get along
so well. I'm proud of her and she's way more emotionally stable, which means I am, too. My mother agrees that staying home to take care of me was the worst parenting decision she ever made, and similarily, I'll never inflict that kind of pressure and guilt on my kids.
(By the way...I don't think there's anything wrong about taking time off to take care of an infant or toddler...although it's not necessary. My mom was in grad school when I was born and worked/studied full time, and I was perfectly happy and taken care of. But staying home to take care of pre-teens/teens can actually backfire, and that was the point of my post).