
Originally Posted by
ibisgirldc
A few random questions/thoughts:
1. The discussion here seems to be mostly about the one category that has a number of posters saying that they'd never go back to traditional, paid employment. I wonder how much the choice to never go back (or to leave 100%) has to do with having a career versus a job. I'm thinking that it's alot easier to give up a job and less interesting to go back to one - although, no doubt, there are career women who make the same sahm choices, as well.
2. Would you be adverse to your husband staying home and having the flexibility to set his own schedule (e.g., "do things I didn't have time for before while working full-time"), work paid jobs on occasion, and have no plans to get back into the job market? I know that we have a few women here who are the sole financial providers for their families, but not many. Assuming that you could earn as much as your husband (glass ceilings aside), couldn't your husband be the one to stay home while you go back to the full-time paid position?
3. On the "earning your own money" concept, I won't speak for the other posters who've said that, but for me, the idea is not having my "own money." It's a work-ethic thing, as well as an issue of responsibility. (Which, again, is not said in any way to diminish the contributions of the sahm choice. Just how i see it for myself.) I bring in what i can to the family while still doing most of what is described by many of the sahms in this thread. I'm not there every day and alot of the week is punctuated by work so I do miss out on that time with my son (as does my husband), but I feel that I bring home much more than a paycheck, too.
No question, though, that there is a reality that says that women are significantly more likely to be improverished and even old and poor due to reliance on their spouse's finances. (meaning that divorce or death comes and the woman, who's been out of the workplace, losing all of those years of earning, earning potential, retirement, savings, and job experience, can never regain the footing that she's lost. It shows in the dismal statistics and most of those women didn't intend to end up in that spot, I'd guess.) I don't work to be defensive and my income is family income (not his or mine)... but I'm mindful of the fact that if something unexpected happens, I have a sustainable path to provide for myself and my son.