|
Notes From the Queen's Castle
Julie Donner Anderson
Every
Mom Is A Working Mom…Period!
An article by: Julie Donner Andersen
Author
of “PAST: Perfect! PRESENT: Tense!
Insights From One Woman’s Journey As The Wife Of A
Widower”
http://www.weyantpress.com/andersen.htm
Having
been, at different times in my life, an unemployed mom, a
work-outside-the-home mom, and a work-at-home mom, I have the luxury
of being open-minded about all three “camps”.
Sadly, stereotypes - and the ignorant comments they breed -
abound in all.
Unemployed
moms get the usual patronizing, “Oh?
So you don’t work? Then what DO you do all day?” inquiry,
mostly from work-outside-the-home moms who have no clue just how
busy a full time mom really is, nor are they aware that stay home
moms DO work – and work hard.
The stereotype of unemployed moms is the myth that they have
allowed their college degrees to expire into nothingness, and could
care less if their brains fry from too much boredom or watching too
many soap operas. The
judgment is that any woman who chooses to stay home and “just”
be a wife and mother must be a lazy, good-for-nothing,
couldn’t-get-hired-at-McDonald’s-if-she-tried underachiever.
Either that or she’s an overeater who can’t pry herself
away from the refrigerator, or a wife who doesn’t give a flying
fig about helping her hard-working husband bring home a
dual-paycheck slab of the homefried bacon.
Work-outside-the-home
moms get judged by default as stay-home moms tsk-tsk their choice to
earn some money to pay the bills.
Stay-home moms assume that the working moms’ kids will end
up juvenile delinquents because Mom isn’t home to guide her little
demons 24 hours a day. Work-outside-the-home
moms get the inane question, “Why did you have kids at all if
you’re going to leave them with babysitters all day?”
God forbid if a work-outside-the-home mom’s child
gets into any sort of mischief, because the end judgement will be
“Well, it figures. After
all, Johnny’s mom is a corporate executive who’s never home
anyway, so how could she give him the attention he needs?”.
The stereotype here is that work-outside-the-home moms
must be career-driven overachievers who need to work to feed their
insatiable egos. That,
or they must be more interested in climbing the corporate ladder
than taking care of priority #1 – their children.
But
everyone loves a work-at-home mom.
I mean, what bad things can be said about a gal who’s got
it all figured out – a way to bring home some needed cash while
still being available to kiss boo-boos, help with homework, and bake
brownies for the PTA. Still,
this is a position that gets no respect.
Even though she is not officially “at” an office, people
still assume a work-at-home mom is available for afternoon teas and
babysitting (“Can you watch my child since you’re home
anyway?”) The
doorbell and phone still ring from people who insist on borrowing
her work time with idle chit-chat.
The stereotype here is that work-at-home moms must not have
the guts nor the education to make it in “the real working
world”, or that the work she is doing at home must be unimportant
and self-serving since it is not corporately structured.
The assumptions made about this kind of mom usually fall
within the “should” category: “Well, she should spend more
time with her family instead of pounding the keyboard or hosting
Tupperware parties”, or “She should go outside the home and get
a REAL job if she’s that desperate for money”.
As
mentioned, all three “camps” have their nay-sayers, assumptions,
and stereotypes. But
the amazing thing is the irony that WE are the ones – us moms and
us sister women – who are casting the stones at each other.
Why must we put each other down just to feel justified in our
own life choices? And why do the negative comments bug us so much?
Are we THAT insecure about our own decisions, whatever they
may be?
In
a perfect world, all moms would pull together to help each other
out. Working moms would
give the stay-home moms a break and start appreciating them for
being the homefire-burners and enablers who provide childcare for
the working moms’ kids so she can go out and bring home some
money. Stay-home moms
would stop being holier-than-thou and offer the
work-outside-the-home mom a hand in a friendly partnership that
enables both of them to reap the rewards of what they do.
And everyone would stop pestering the work-at-home mom so she
can get her work done!
Recently,
I was asked to write some witty come-backs for all three camps, so
each could defend themselves against the other’s barbs.
Sorry, but I personally don’t think that “the best
offense is a good defense” in this situation, especially when
defending one’s parenting choices usually ends up with someone’s
feelings and/or pride being hurt beyond repair.
This
is NOT a utopian world we live in, so the rude comments and
stereotypes will still remain.
But if we, as a gender of genteel and understanding women,
make a heroic attempt at a truce with our sister women by way of
compassionate understanding, then I think the world would be a
better, if not perfect, place to live in.
It
is time that we, as women, stop being each other’s worst enemies
and start being each other’s best friends, and start appreciating
each other’s unique contributions to society and to our families.
~~Julie
Donner Andersen is a happily married, work-at-home mom of three who
is busy finishing her second book, entitled, “In The Shadow Of
A Saint – A Guide To Dating The Bereaved”.
|