Life is mysterious, fascinating, intriguing. Here my words nibble around the edges of it as the mood takes me.
Monday, March 9, 2009
Mom-Guilt
JD and I were having this conversation about the guilt that moms have about their work choices.
It seems to skulk around the corner no matter which route you decide to take as a mom.
(Except if you need to work; maybe less guilt there because its a necessity?)
I was the stay-at-home version so it's the only one I can speak about from experience.
I remember that I sometimes got horribly frustrated and wondered if I would be ever again be capable of an interesting thought.
I had some wistful moments when I wondered what I might have accomplished if I had pursued a career instead.
And what startling and wonderful contribution to mankind I hadn't made because I was too busy changing nappies!
I often felt useless and guilty because I wasn't contributing to the family finances.
I hated it when some slick chick asked me at one of DH's work functions what I "did", having to tell her, because I knew the silly cow would think that meant I did nothing but sit around and read women's mags and drink coffee with friends (I WISH!)
Besides that, I hated that she looked so groomed and 'in touch' with the 'real' world of business and important stuff - I felt like an ignorant lump next to all that.
Felt guilty that I earned no money of my own.
And hated that so many of our conversations went around: the potty training or teething of our kids; how lazy and unreliable our servants were (in those days that was BIG); what our husbands did wrong. . .
There were no TV programs to chew over; going to movies was still as much a treat as was chicken for lunch, so that was out as a topic; no one was in the slightest bit interested in politics, sport, or foreign affairs (personal maybe, but not foreign)
I was no better than they were; we were all stuck in this mindless morass of the mundane.
But looking back now, I see that that was the actual stuff of life: the day to day nitty gritty and we were (well, I was) too dumb to recognize it.
One of the things I admire about this present generation is that they are so much more aware of the value of right now.
So many are making a conscious effort to prize the everyday.
Anyway, the upside:
I loved that I could use my time (what was left of it with 4 kids in the mix!) as I wanted to: no boss shunting me around!
I loved that I could see every bit of all my children's unfolding; that I could be there when things were exciting for them and they needed to tell of it; and when things were going badly and they need to unpack that.
I loved sunbathing and swimming when others were at work.
And gardening till I was dizzy and coming into the cool house and collapsing with an ice cold drink for as long as I liked
I loved that I didn't have to catch a train in the dark and pouring rain in the winter to get to work.
I loved lots of things about being an at-home mom - and they sound silly but - those are the important things to me now.
Any working moms out there who want to tell the other side of the story?
What you love; what you hate; and what makes you feel guilty - or not?
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4 comments:
Interesting post...
I wonder how I'd cope if I ever became a SAHD.. not contributing financially would kill me most for sure... I'd probably run a home office instead.
ah well - I look forward to seeing what other comments come through
Allie - your days as a SAHM sound idyllic! Nowadays - being a SAHM is a fulltime job in itself! (As you would have gathered from my last post - trying to keep up with the yummy mummy's)
I think a moms guilt is universal - regardless of whether she stays at home to raise the kids, or goes to work to earn a crust! We.Always.Feel.Guilty!! About something. Even though we shouldn't!
From a personal point of view - the
part-time work thing works for me! I couldn't be a full time mom, because I think I would become a bad mommy and just shout at my kids all day out of pure frustration! I need the mental stimulation and adult conversation that my job as a physio provides!
BUT - I could NOT work full time! Because then the guilt would just consume me and I would be a pathetic physio and a bad mommy!
Dare I say I think I have the perfect balance for me?? I drop my oldest off at school in the morning, then drop my middle one off at nursery school (baby stays at home) - then I nip into the practice, see 3-4 patients, then I pick up Madam from nursery, Little lord from school, dash home to see baby - and then moms taxi round for the afternoon begins... and at night: I fall into bed exhausted!
Sorry - got carried away here, you probably didn't want sooo much info!!! xx
That is the most important job in the world...if I look at Mel you did a great job!
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