elin said:
Throughout this thread, you have criticized women who work by suggesting that they place their needs above those of their families. It seems as if you are guilt tripping women who choose time consuming and intellectually stimulating careers. If it didn't work out for you, than leave it at that.
Nope, that's what you chose to read into my comments. On more than one occasion even in this thread I have stated that this was our choice for our family...and also...since I WORK outside of the home part-time, I don't really see how I can imply anything about working moms vs stay at home moms.
elin said:
If you count your daughter's behavior as quality time, than good for you. I think that after a certain age (kindergarten) children benefit greatly from being enrolled in after-school programs. (Art, dance, math and science, chess, music)
Well, that is another reason that I AM home after school...so that we can drive to dance, boy scouts, girl scouts, gymnastics and oh yes...did I mention that I'm homeschooling my children in german? I couldn't do all of those things if I was at the office in the afternoons.
Quality time all depends on how your kids define it. Is your daughter going to remember you being in the background while she talks on the phone with her friends. Is your toddler going to remember throwing clothes down the stairs while you stood in the background?
She doesn't spend every day talking on the phone...it was just one example. Will she remember that I drove her to dance and sat and watched? Will she remember that I made her the after school snack and baked cookies with her?
At the end of the day, my children may not remember, but I will...and for me personally, this is important. I will remember my little peanut tossing the clothes down the stairs
🙂 I will remember being here and that is something that I value...I value these years...I value this fleeing time in their lives.
Will my children benefit from being over-scheduled and having an activity every day? Will they learn to appreciate down-time or always expect to be entertained? Is it better for me to have them in an activity every day than to play a game with them?
My parents were there for the important moments in my life, good and bad, they helped shape my moral standards, and were always a source of support and encouragement. That's all most kids need, unless your kids have severe social/behavioral problems.
I agree that that is important...I just question how someone can provide that working 100 hours a week is all. My husband went to medical school and we 'survived' his residency and fellowship...there wasn't a lot of time for being there for the important events or providing support and encouragement...but I'm sure that you are different than he is.
Again all of this depends on where your ambitions lie and your level of intelligence. If you aren't that smart and dislike college and academics, then it probably won't be a great personal loss if you become a stay at home mom. However, if you are academically talented and ambitious, it will be extremely disappointing to become a permanent stay at home mom for the most part.
That is funny. I recieved an undergraduate degree with a double major in german and psychology, later went back and studied biology as a post-bac student AND later earned my MS in Molecular Biology. I continue taking classes when I can for my own interest, teach german to children one morning a week and to adults one evening a week ... and in addition I teach a biology lab class at a local university.
In my time as a sahm I have met parents who were doctors and lawyers that decided to stay home because they found parenting to be so rewarding. I also know very bright women who haven't finished college yet but are planning on returning after their children are in school...I don't find them to not be ambitious or intelligent. Are you implying that all sahm's aren't intelligent?
Is it sometimes disappointing and frustrating? yes. Is it worth it? In my eyes, yes it is.