From Voice ~ Topics: journals, life balance

The Myth of the Working Mom

How do you do it all?”

I often get this question, and my answer is this: no one does it all. Doing it all means, of course, having a career and having kids, and it’s one of the great myths of our era. The myth is that you can pursue these two essentially incompatible activities without screwing up either one. The myth is that having children will infuse your professional work with a wondrous energy (akin to the fabled second-trimester glow), and that having a job will make you a more interesting and fulfilled person, and thus a better parent.

One year ago, I had the privilege of sitting on a panel called “Women Rock!” at the national AIGA Design Conference in Boston. Devoted to the life issues faced by female designers, the panel sought to “offer unique insights on juggling career and family, dealing with stress, and how all the chaos offers training and inspiration for becoming a better designer, a better businessperson and a better mother.” That program blurb neatly sums up the myth, suggesting that the chaotic life of the working mom provides the ultimate training ground for getting better at everything.

So there we were on the stage, a group of middle-aged female designers: Jessica Helfand, Deanna Kuhlmann-Leavitt, Bonnie Siegler, Emily Potts (who graciously organized the panel) and myself. We all had kids, and we all had jobs. Bonnie, in her early forties, had just had her second baby, who was being patiently handled by her husband sitting in the front row. We were all relatively successful, some more prominent than others, but let’s say none of us was exactly Stefan Sagmeister, about to start carving letters in our chests with an Xacto knife. (If any of us would, I guess it would be Bonnie.)

The audience was eager to find out how to do it all, but one of the best questions came from Boston-based designer Fritz Klaetke, who asked why there weren’t any men on the panel. After all, one of the ways women manage in today’s world is having supportive partners like Fritz, who exemplifies the new model of hyper-involved, ultra-engaged fatherhood. Fritz is an excellent designer, a leader in the Boston design community, and a deeply committed dad. My own husband, Abbott Miller (who is a much better mom than I am), wants to publish a magazine called Working Father—an absurd idea pointing to our societal assumption that dads have to work anyway.

The event in Boston last year got me thinking about work and parenting and all the fudging and corner-cutting we do in order to pursue them both. Younger mothers, I’ve learned, are more likely to stay at home with their small children than women my age. I was born in 1963 at the tail end of the Baby Boom, and I grew up in a household with two working parents, always believing that work would define my life. Generation X is the swath of people born between 1965 and 1979. A common experience for this group is the “absent father” or being a child of divorce. Perhaps because of that experience, as well as the general trend towards downward mobility, Generation X moms and dads both put more value on spending time at home with their kids and less value on professional success.

A strange conversational dance occurs when two women meet and begin finding out who works and who stays at home. It’s awkward to ask directly, so you look for cues. (A mom who wears tennis whites when she drops off the kids at school might not have a job, but you never know; she could be a lawyer with a home office or a brain surgeon who works the night shift.) The infamous message board UrbanBaby assigns codes for one’s employment status: SAHM for moms who stay at home; WOHM for those who work outside the home.

Why does it matter? There’s a “mommy war” going on, and members of each side often feel more comfortable with other women who have made choices like theirs. Furthermore, we are often eager to validate our own decisions as the best ones for our children. The SAHMs occupy the moral high ground in this matter—they’re the ones who have made the big sacrifice, spending crucial years of their lives almost exclusively with their kids, refusing to hand over their babies and toddlers to nannies, au pairs, and day care facilities for eight or ten hours a day.

It seems obvious to me that mothers and fathers are the best “care givers” for small children, and research more or less bears this out. Working moms try to argue that their own kids are getting the better deal: earlier socialization, more independence, an immune system toughened by exposure to pathogens, and, above all, the opportunity to draw inspiration from a busy mother whose mental life and personal identity derives not just from her children, but also from a career. But young children, as I’ve observed them, are deeply self-involved. Until my kids reached elementary school age, they rarely took interest in either parent, beyond our readiness to entertain, protect, sooth, feed, transport and so on. Little kids want to be with their parents because we make them feel safe, whole and happy, not because they admire our professional achievements.

Knowing this in my heart, I nonetheless made my own decision to continue working while my children were small. I look at my kids now, ages eight and twelve, and wonder what choices they will make. Will they have kids? Will they have jobs? (Will jobs still exist when they grow up?) Would they have become happier and more fulfilled adults if I had quit working for eight or nine years? I’ll never know the answer, any more than I will know what kind of professional success I would have achieved if I hadn’t slowed down to have children.

I vividly recall a bath-time conversation when my son Jay was in second grade. With his head covered in a foamy helmet of shampoo, he announced, “Most of my friends’ moms don’t work.” Dismay lurched deep in my gut. “What do you think about that?” I asked. “I dunno, “ he said.

When I ask him the same question now, he says he likes my job because I teach him “cool design stuff,” like how to use Flash and how to publish his designs and animations on the web. My younger daughter, Ruby, feels similarly. Getting dressed for camp recently, she announced, “Mommy, you’re cool.” “Wow,” I said. “Why do you think I’m cool?” (Surely it wasn’t because of my Lands End circle skirt.) “Because you’re a designer, and we get to design things together.” My tween-age children are now finding value in my professional skills. My work has become an opportunity for creative companionship with my kids. Indeed, design is becoming part of their own identities, for now, as they each stake out a place in the world of digital media and visual art—areas full of intrigue and possibility.

At that same conference in Boston last year, Alex Isley organized a breakout session about teaching kids to be designers. He argued for the social importance of teaching your own kids—and all the others kids around you—to be designers in their daily lives. David Peters, another “working father” attending the conference, talked to me and some other parents about organizing events for kids for the next AIGA national conference, so we can bring our children along and have hands-on activities for them to do all weekend. My kids and I would like to be the first volunteers to staff the booth. We’ll do the best we can, and we’ll be working.

About the Author: Ellen Lupton is a designer, educator, writer, and mother. She co-edits the blogs http://d-i-y-kids.blogspot.com/ and http://www.design-your-life.org with her sister Julia Lupton.

  1. link to this comment by Adrienne Tue Sep 12, 2006

    Thank you! I really appreciate this article, and I have to agree that the only way I can continue my work AND be a (decent) mom is with the help of my husband. I would have lost it a long time ago without his support! He, too, is a better mom than I. Maybe these dads should start a group – SAHD!

    And I want to be the second volunteer to incorporate hands-on activities for kids at the next conference. Design is a way of thinking that can improve how we live, so why not put that to use with our children?!

  2. link to this comment by Maria Loor Wed Sep 13, 2006

    Great article! I enjoyed a lot. Thanks.

  3. link to this comment by Jessica Helfand Wed Sep 13, 2006

    Middle-aged female designers! Speak for yourself! (Just kidding.) Anyway, as what I am sure was the OLDEST person on that middle-aged panel a year ago, let me just add that I'd write more, but I'm in the middle of exacto-blading my chest ...

    In truth, though, I was delighted to read your round-up as it so closely parallels my own. As a WIHM (Working Inside the Home Mom) whose children are growing up in my studio, there's a whole level of creative interaction that I never intended to have, but couldn't imagine living without. Every year when my children gleefully toss the Sally Foster gift-wrap mailers that come home in their lunchboxes, I feel just hugely triumphant.

    I can recall some years ago watching Bette Midler interviewed on television by the irrepressible Barbara Walters, who asked her how she felt about "having it all" — and Midler pouted a little, and asked if it would be allright if she gave some of it back? Even then it was a joke, this mythical goal we were all supposed to have.

  4. link to this comment by Daniela Marx Wed Sep 13, 2006

    What an insightful article. I am so happy I happened upon it while frantically researching for some material for a faculty meeting tomorrow. (I am defending our regimented program to the art faculty who do not understand graphic design.) I am a new mother (9 months new) and I feel overwhelmed ALL the time but somehow everything works out.

    I, too, am very lucky to have an amazing husband who swears that he would gladly stay at home if I could support the family on my salary. I often think about how nice it would be to take a few years off to focus on raising my child instead of paying someone else, but who can afford it these days? We both have to work full time in order to pay our bills.

    I am glad I love what I do. Do I fantisize about winning the lottery so my husband could stay at home with our daughter and cook me amazing meals all the time-heck yeah!

    Thanks again, for all of you sharing your strength. It makes me feel that maybe, just maybe, it will all work out.

  5. link to this comment by Rachele McGinty-Mock Thu Sep 14, 2006

    Ellen, thanks for this article!

    In my 'spare‘ time, I find myself pouring over books, articles, pod-casts and websites about other working mothers. I relish the stories of these crazed mothers and the perspectives of other mothers who ‘do it all“ – perhaps as a means to justify what I‘m doing but possibly hoping one of them will give me their secret (a pill or a drink perhaps) to success.

    It was so refreshing to see your article on our own industry's website today.

    (Now really, what is your secret?)

    - Mom, Full-time Designer and MFA Candidate in Atlanta, GA

  6. link to this comment by Dominic J. Russo Thu Sep 14, 2006

    I stand firmly resolved that all children should be taught to be better designers of their own lives, their own surroundings, their own destinies. My own children are used to the idea that Dad "art directs" everything in our world; from the clothes we wear, to the food we eat.

    Presentation helps us to think harder. It makes us think past the ideas that someone else has come up with. Before the video games "suck the brains" out of my children, I strongly encourage them to broaden their minds.

    Design does this on a number of different levels.

    Thank you for reminding me.

  7. link to this comment by Victoria Main Thu Sep 14, 2006

    Thankyou so much! I found this article incredibly encouraging. I'm a young woman, just about to enter the competetive design world, and I recently found out that I'm pregnant. I've been so scared of the road up ahead and wondering if I'll be able to reach my goals as a designer while balancing the trials of motherhood. I feel more inspired and motivated then ever!

  8. link to this comment by Stella Bugbee Thu Sep 14, 2006

    Though I have continued to work since having children, I've had to battle the assumption by many (mostly male) former colleagues that I have given up my career. At a recent design event I was introduced to some one by one of these men as, "Stella Bugbee, she used to be a designer and then she had twins."

    It would be laughable, if it weren't so troubling.

    This is a topic that is often fraught with cliches and assumptions, so such a down-to-earth and honest take on it is refreshing. When I was in college in the early 90's it seemed like there was quite an interest in the issues facing women in design and in fostering a community based around them. Ellen was at the epicenter then, and I am so glad to see she is still there voicing her experiences and getting others to join in the conversation. I loved the article and I loved the posts. More please!

  9. link to this comment by JWH Thu Sep 14, 2006

    Thanks so much for this wonderful article. I also work outside the home. My kids are very funny. They seem to be very proud of what I do. That is a good feeling for me because I have been struggling with whether or not I made the right decision. Your article helped me move on. Your honesty and calm attitude about the whole thing gives me a new way to look at things.

  10. link to this comment by Stephanie Davis Thu Sep 14, 2006

    Ellen thank you for your article. I am a WOHM and a member of a playgroup full of SAHMs. I do struggle sometimes with my decision, especially since I spend much of my "free" time with women who have chosen to stay home. Your article gave me some reassurance that my kids will probably turn out okay and may even come to think I am "cool" for holding on to my career!

  11. link to this comment by Kriston Sellier Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Ellen, I too attended the Women Rock seminar and was blown away by the confidence each woman designer had in their personal decisions to become a mom, a designer & how each was able to manage it. Being a parent of 2 toddlers and a principle of a 6 person design firm, I struggle daily with balancing everything that needs to get done. It's nice to know that you, being a famous designer / teacher and a mother who I look up to, have also struggled. It helps me to feel confident that even through I have rough days, I am doing what I need to do for me. Just last week, I told my 3 yr old I had a rough day, and she cuddled up to me, patted my arm and said "Everything is going to be alright"- quoting it straight from her favorite Bob Marley song!

  12. link to this comment by Anne Galperin Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Good to read this piece. When I was in grad school I began counting women who combined active design practices with family life, and the growing number continues to be a source of comfort. I’ve concluded that it’s fine having other caring and responsible people take care of my daughter (she’ll be five in November); she’s an only child and has really flowered because of the daily contact with other adults and children. My husband and I were also fortunate to find and be able to afford good childcare. The big surprise in the past five years is how very vital my professional life as a designer/design educator is to my sense of self. Even though motherhood and my tenure-track position began simultaneously—and the combination nearly flattened me—I don’t think I’m constitutionally suited to be a SAHM. (For an uplifting read on moms with vocations, check out the essay on work in Natalia Ginzburg’s book The Little Virtues. Though I read it long before I had a child or a career its influence was, um, seminal.) We can’t have it all without partners who embrace the practical and emotional realities of being a parent and mom-supportive policies in the workplace, including private and clean places to pump and store milk (and the understanding that you need to pump frequently to maintain milk supply), flextime, etc. In hindsight, everything worked out decently, but if I had it to do again, I would have brought my daughter to school with me during her infancy and nursed her on demand there. That would have subjected the myth to some reality testing!

  13. link to this comment by lorraine Wild Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Well, I hate to be a "nattering nabob of negativism," but here I go....maybe the result of sufferring the icy stare of my 8 year old when I announced to her yesterday that I had to get on a plane today to go to an out-of-town client who is insisting on a Saturday meeting, thus insuring that I miss that nice aimless Friday evening with family that usually preceeds the early Saturday morning soccer game...
    I just don't think that the problem is with the SAHMs versus the WOHMS (I guess the SAHMS just aren't on my radar, or the LA dress code is so confusing you would never know who is who anyway). To me the biggent problem that faces any woman designer who chooses to be a mother is the way the needs of children and family collide with the "24/7" culture of design, the very real needs of clients, and assumptions about speed and service. Supportive spouses? Sure I have one, but he also runs his own architecture office, and our ("loving"!) dinner conversations almost always include a stressy comparison of who is facing the more brutal deadline, and how the family is going to accomodate that. In other words, it's bad for dads who design too. I'm old enough to remember a time when design (along with a lot of other professions) was somehow not as hectic as commodity trading. Who needs to carve into their own skin when we carry the self-inflicted wounds of multi-tasking? Slow design, anyone?

  14. link to this comment by Millie Thorstad Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Hmm. Food for thought, definitely. A good article but I disagree with the idea that kids need to be designers. After teaching art to 3-5th graders for 3 years, I have a total appreciation of how incredibly creative kids are - when you leave them be. I think there is a disturbing trend right now to organize everything about your child's life when you're a parent. Whatever happened to free play, recess, and 3 whole months of summer to mess around and just be? Parenthood is about THEM, not about you. It's nice that they admire and want to emulate you, but am not sure it might be the best thing in the world. When you're 85 and one or all of your kids ask you to live with them instead of taking you to a retirement home, that's success. (kicking my soap box out of the way now).

  15. link to this comment by Amy Hecht Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Sorry guys, but I have to go back to the beginning of this thread and ask what about the men? This all reminds me of an interview I saw ages ago. Chuck Scarborough was interviewing Christie Todd Whitman (then Governor of NJ) and asked her how her children felt about her being away from home so much. I bristled. What male politician has ever been asked such a question? While there will never be true equality as long as women are the ones bearing the babies, can we at least get that issue of "Working Father" up and running already? Or SAHD? I don't find the notion so absurd.

  16. link to this comment by Joe Moran Fri Sep 15, 2006

    Reading this late, but in the morning ... I'm calling my Mom — just to tell her I love her.

    Respectfully,

  17. link to this comment by Ellen Lupton Sat Sep 16, 2006

    Lorraine mentions an earlier time when design was not such a hectic 24/7 activity. The profession has gotten crazier, and the more successful you are, the more demanding it probably is. But could it be that Lorraine is also remembering a peaceful time sometime before she became a mother?

  18. link to this comment by Ellen's sister Sat Sep 16, 2006

    Ellen's article (and the comments) have me in tears. I remember asking one of my kids when she was very little, "What does Mommy do?" And she answered, "Clean up." I am still introduced at literature conferences (I am in fact a better college professor than I am a housekeeper) as "the woman with the triplets."

    When I am asked, "How do you do it all?", I increasingly answer, "Design." As someone lucky enough to have an amazing twin sister who is a designer, I've gotten to experiment with design around the edges of my day. Often this involves the kids. Yesterday we made t-shirts for three separate birthday parties. I am helping "brand" a new research group at my university with a logo, website, print invitations, door prizes, etc.; my colleagues are so delighted to be part of a "real group," even though we have no funding, no major, no nothing besides a name and a look. The kids understand my design obsessions more than my scholarship on Shakespeare. With everyone now in elementary school, our house has genuinely become a studio. But the early years were rough, and I agree with Ellen that there's no getting around the fact of compromise. Clean up, anyone?

  19. link to this comment by Stella Sat Sep 16, 2006

    Amy is right to bring up the men again. One of the realities facing all women is that we are still not paid equally for our work compared to men.

    My husband and I are both designers. Our negotaition of careers was complicated by the fact that my husband's earning potential (at the time) was higher than mine. The longer I stayed out of work the more extreme that disparity would have become. The issues surrounding work were not only about our children, and personal happiness, but among other things, my long-term earning potential and it's implications for our family.

    In the end we both decided to slow down slightly for the first two years, and share the responsibilities of work and home. Compromise. I hope that takes us one step further to closing the income gap and to greater equality; values I sincerely hope to impart to my children.

    Obvioulsly from Lorraine's description of dinnertime, a family with two creative parents is a tightrope that we'll be balancing for many years to come.

  20. link to this comment by Ellen McMahon Sat Sep 16, 2006

    I was hired as a full time professor with a 5-year-old daughter and an infant. While on tenure track I needed to get an MFA and national recognition in the field to secure my position. My mother couldn’t understand why I had to do everything at once. But I believed I had to make the most of an opportunity I probably wouldn’t get again. I know we all suffered for my career. I know there are up sides also. One of my daughters began making art, like she saw me make when she was younger, when she was fifteen and I believe that creative self-expression helped her survive her teens. But the important thing is that we do what we do, what is right for us, and like Ellen says we will never know what would have happened if we had made other choices. As I get into deep middle age I remind myself regularly to accept the decisions I’ve made and appreciate the life I have.

  21. link to this comment by AB Wed Sep 20, 2006

    The question I keep coming back to in discussions such these is: does anything we do as parents matter? Will our children turn out the way they're going to -- secure or not, successful or not, happy or not -- no matter what we do?

    Clearly, there are many ways in which we can mess up our children. But as long we meet certain minimum standards -- keeping our children fed, clothed and shod, encouraging them to read, introducing them to museums and music -- it seems to me more and more that the destiny of our children is in their hands, not ours.

    Although the debate is often framed as a question about the well being of children -- is it better for them if Mom works or if Mom stays at home? -- I suggest it's really a question of the well-being of that particular Mom and that particular Dad. As long as they provide for the basic physical and intellectual needs of their children, they should make additional choices based on their own needs. Some Moms (and some Dads) will be happier staying at home. They should do that. Others will be happier working outside. For them, that's the right choice. As an indirect benefit they'll find that making themselves happy leads to greater happiness at home.

    What's to be avoided, at all costs, is over-sacrifice. I can't see how a child can possibly benefit from the constant presence at home of a reproachful parent: "I gave it all up for you." Even if the thought never finds verbal expression, the child will sense the attitude. I'd alter slightly a sentence from Ellen's essay, and say "Little kids want to be with their parents *as long as* they make them feel safe, whole and happy." Not every parent does. I know several mothers from earlier generations, when the choices we're now discussing didn't exist, whose presence at home did very little for their children. They, and their children, would have been better off had they worked outside the home.

    From this point of view, each of us does know what would have happened if she or he had "made the other choice." Given that a particular personal need -- professional success; a neat, orderly home; money; the smell of fresh-baked bread every day; the drive to create the quantum theory of gravity -- probably led to the original choice in the first place, the other choice would almost certainly have been a disaster. When people ask these "what if?" questions, the "if" is usually a big one. It's not just "What if I had stayed at home?" but "What if I had stayed at home and had the completely different kind of personality that enjoys staying at home?" Despite the greater range of choices we have today, we still don't quite have the freedom to switch our natures.

  22. link to this comment by Susan Margolis Wed Sep 20, 2006

    It IS good to hear from others. As a single mother of a 3 year old, I put myself through a Masters in ID program, graduating in 1984, Yes, I had to work my way through school and no, I did not know about financial aid at the time. We made it through the Masters Program and then I made the biggest mistake of my life-

    Going to Work for a Toy Company.

    I thought it would keep me close to my daughter's growing mentality/interests.
    Silly me.
    I can hear you all laughing.
    You can stop now.....

    Later I was lucky enough to work with a small design group and still later I have taken on the ultimate challenge, teaching all your 10-14 year old sons and daughters about Technology and also about Art and how Science and English and Language and History and Mathematics are all mixed up together in design. Teaching, enabling a young one to find their designer' voice, is a job you can never do well enough or often enough. I hope that each and every one of you finds a way to try this sometime.

    No matter how hard it was as a mom then -
    (and my daughter grew up into the most wonderful young woman the world could hope for) everything I have ever learned along the way has been needed, used, added to and amended through the teaching process. It is exhausting though. I am just glad that I can come home to my 14 year old and my new (18 years) husband. Their interests now 'inform' my own and bring the world to me.

  23. link to this comment by Joy Stauber Thu Sep 21, 2006

    Thanks for this article, Ellen. It's great to read the comments too. I was just talking with a friend/colleague about all of this yesterday.

    One observation:
    All of the women on the panel have their own business (I think). The same is true for most of the women designers I know who have children.

    I'm 39 (with my own business, a very involved husband, and an almost-3 year old son) and my female design contemporaries seem to fall into three camps:
    - Have their own business, have a child/children or are considering doing so
    - Work for others, have moved into client service or in-house/corporate positions, which helps allow for a life outside of work
    - Have a child/children and left design as a result

    Do you have to have your own business to have a child AND continue being a designer?
    In my 20s, I noticed that only principles and support (non-design) staff had children. Makes sense. How could you possibly balance work-life demands during annual report season when you're expected to work 24/7? How could you have a healthy pregnancy? Come on, how could you even have the opportunity to GET pregnant?!

    Seems like design suffers the same female "brain drain" that law and other fields experience, so we need to keep designing better work approaches or environments. We are in an industry that is a little crazy. But having a child -- or an interest in anything outside of work -- does help you prioritize and edit all the elements to find workable (and change-able) solutions.

    Hope to see the premier issue of Working Father soon too!

    Joy

  24. link to this comment by Wendy Fox Mon Sep 25, 2006

    What I found quite amazing is that we all (myself included) managed to find the time to read Ellen's article and everyone's comments. - mother of a 14 month old who is trying to hold together some sort of a design career and be with my son.

  25. link to this comment by Maya Drozdz Tue Sep 26, 2006

    From my own experience of working with people who are also parents, I've found that they seem to be able to 'do it all' because they barely pay attention. Or, they only pay as much attention as they need to. So, whatever needs to be dealt with is dealt with, but with an air of permament distractedness. They seem to listen for keywords and action verbs, and then do the obvious task, but there is no room for discussion on the myriad grey areas of the task at hand. I don't blame parents for this, and it's probably true of any professional with a complex home life. I'm just pointing this out as one way to address this myth.

  26. link to this comment by 'Working Dog' Dad Wed Sep 27, 2006

    As the father of two adult daughters, I'm very pleased at the progress made over the past twenty years at making the workplace more 'working mother friendly', or shall I say 'working parent friendly'. I work for one of the top companies featured in Working Mother Magazine and I'm proud of my company's accomplishments in this area. The future looks bright for young professionals, regardless of gender.

    As a realist, it's only fair to point out that nothing comes without a cost. Managers in our company are given a goal that states 'fifty percent of promotions to upper pay grades must be women and minorities'. Women are give preference when requests are made for regularly scheduled 'work from home' days. Managers have told my co-workers (male) that they are not allowed to work from home while the same manager has two females (in the same job role) that enjoy this privilege.

    Don't get me wrong here -I'm not a male chauvinist. The population of males and females in my division is 70% male and 30% female. Since I work in Information Technology (IT), this is not a surprise. Most of the longer term employees are male. When I started in this profession twenty-five years ago, IT was not viewed as a good occupation for females, especially those with young children. I spent many unplanned nights and weekends working to fix computer systems.

    Over time, emergency off-hours work has greatly diminished and the stigma of working in a 'man's job' has disappeared making IT a viable profession for many females. I love the insight and organizational skills that many of my female peers bring to the table - I'm just well aware of the sacrifice made by many of us 'working dads' to further this effort. So whenever I feel slighted I just back off and look at the big picture and be glad that I have a good job and can provide for my family, even though the career opportunities are drying up.

  27. link to this comment by IM Fri May 25, 2007

    wonderful article. i am a working mom(as of now :)), and under a dilemma of leaving or not leaving the job. i have a soon-to-be 3 and a 1 year old, who i feel will be better being with me stay at home with them, but also i like working( enjoying the developnment related challenges and all), and think of "what if" i quit and then need to work and won't get a job(I am IT field). so, do i make a choice to be home with them, because then i will have more time to listen and enjoy with them, without having the stress in the back of my mind that i have to finish my office work, or let them have growing up with caring, good but strangers who hopefully are showing and teaching close to similar values what i would be.
    also, since working in the IT field, there will be very less chance of getting back in the same field after being out of the workforce for a few years.
    I don't know how mom's make the decision to stay at home with their kids, 'cos it is a stressful one for me right now.

  28. link to this comment by T. Davis Sat Aug 18, 2007

    You're so right! It's quite funny when they begin to realize that mommy might just be kind of cool. I brought my girls to the TV station...and they were star struck by the tv personalities and in awe of the concept of mom working for "Channel 12". I was proud.

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