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Opinion: Dads Can Stay Home With the Kids, Too
Filed under: Work Life, Opinions
Working mothers shouldn't be the only ones making sacrifices. Credit: Getty Images
Discussions of successful women always seem to include the notion of being forced to make a choice: time with the kids, or career advancement. Parents should consider that dads can stay home with the kids, too.
It is also possible for men to make a choice to take on more responsibilities at home. There is nothing wrong with the traditional 1950s-style family, where the husband goes to work and the wife takes care of the kids. But there also is nothing wrong with the reverse. In my family, it's me, the dad, who is the head of the household.
A few years ago, my wife and I decided that I would be the one to stay home with the kids. I had been self-employed for a long time, and I was still going to work, but strictly from home. As the kids get older and have more things to deal with, I continue to make adjustments to my schedule -- sometimes daily.
For example, sometimes I don't start writing until 10 p.m. Why? Because that's when I have finally gotten the kids to bed, cleaned up the kitchen and completed the various other tasks that need to be done every single day. I used to complain about my household duties, partly because they can sometimes get in the way of paying work.
But, while I still don't like doing certain things (especially cleaning the sink trap, in which one day I expect to find the remains of Jimmy Hoffa), I accept that they need to be done, that it's my job to do them and that I have to make choices about how much work I can handle. Is staying up later than I would like and getting up early to finish that work fun? No. But it's my choice to do it this way.
Jezebel's Irin Carmon writes that when it comes to women achieving professional success, "It's hard not to look at the evidence and conclude that you're damned if you do, damned if you don't." I understand what she means but it doesn't have to be that way. The assumption that a woman must make a choice between career and family, whereas for a man there is no need to pick one or the other, is just as retro as the notion that a woman's place is in the kitchen. Chromosomes don't determine whose job is more valid any more than sex dictates professional aptitude.
I consider myself lucky that I can make some choices about how I spend my time. In some households, it is a financial necessity that both parents work. But even in those situations, men and woman should be treated more equally when it comes to housework and child-raising. Working mothers often are told they have two jobs -- their profession, and being a mom.
Recently, I was filling out a form for one of my children, and there was a box to list your maiden name, because, of course, only a mother would have this responsibility. At many schools, parent-related events are often called "Mom's Night Out." I'm not crying discrimination here. But it would seem that men are not the only ones perpetuating gender stereotypes.
This issue is always current, but is even more so because of the pending retirement of Justice John Paul Stevens. Over at The Daily Beast, Peter Beinart suggests President Obama should nominate a mom to fill the upcoming vacancy on the Supreme Court, because it will send a message "that women can have kids and still reach the apex of their profession."
One could argue that a message has already been sent. Martha Stewart is about as successful as a person can be, and she has a daughter. Carol Bartz, the current president and CEO of Yahoo!, has three kids. Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox, has two.
And you know what that proves? Absolutely nothing. Well, I suppose it shows that women can have a family and also experience professional success. But so what? More female CEOs won't shatter the glass ceiling overnight.
I'm not saying more women running large corporations is a bad thing. It certainly helps to chip away at the still prevalent idea that women can't handle the pressure and responsibility that comes with a high-profile position. But, retro attitudes about gender roles will still exist. The United States has an African-American president. Yet, I still see taxis zoom past black people on the streets of Manhattan. One thing has nothing to do with the other.
A mom on the Supreme Court sounds good to me. But not to send a message. The message young women and young men should be sent is that they are capable of making choices, and that those choices do not need to conform to society's norms.
I'm not a woman, so I don't know how important it is to have more high-profile examples of successful women with children to look up to. What I do know is that making a choice to take care of your kids instead of pursuing a career is a valid one, no matter your gender.
Maybe we can all open our minds a little bit and stop making broad assumptions about who is supposed to do what.
Related: Babies of Working Moms Get Just as Much Cuddle Time
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ReaderComments (Page 1 of 5)
4-29-2010 @ 2:29PM
queenoqueens said...Yay! I like this article. My husband stayed home with our first child til she was four, and it often seemed like the deck was stacked against him.
Staying home is a great choice for both men and women. Thanks for this post.
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 12:44PM
Toobie said...I love this article also!!! My husband did the same for our first daughter also! I love that I knew our daughter was in safe hands while I went off to work. But it burned me up so bad when family would comment on him being he one staying home. It's sad that so many people turn up their noses about men staying home taking care of the kids. They made it seems like he did nothing but sit on his behind all day. They would say that he wasn't a man etc etc. But I was happy, he was happy and our daughter was happy. This is what worked for us and it worked very well! Then with the birth of our second daughter he decided that he wanted to work for us while I stayed home and take care of the girls. : ) This post is great!
5-06-2010 @ 10:30AM
IvoryPirate_EbonyBandit said...Check yourself before you wreck yourself.
5-06-2010 @ 11:38AM
Becki said...My husband is a stay at home dad homeschooling our 3 children. My respect for him has risen tremendously!!!!
5-06-2010 @ 11:35AM
Michelle said...I completely agree. My husband has stayed home with our daughter for the past 2 years (although he does work a PT job). He is a natural at it. I couldn't ask for a better person to be there caring for her.
And with another baby on the way, it is cute seeing him get nervous. But he is so kind, caring and creative, I know he will do a wonderful job.
Knowing he is the one home watching our children makes getting up and going to work in the moring easier.
5-06-2010 @ 7:39AM
Ches said...This is so refreshing to hear! And so very true. If only the insecure wouldn't perpetuate the stereotypes, oh, what a different world it could be.
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 10:42AM
Brenda said...I know for a FACT that God is NOT insecure. And since it is HIS STANDARD that says a man works by the sweat of his brow and the woman takes care of the kids and the home......I wouldnt call this a "sterotype" being perpetuated onto the woman or the man. Its MORE LIKE a PRINCIPAL of God's.
And Gods plan ALWAYS prevails ABOVE any of mans.
It's ALWAYS the BETTER way to do things...even if you CANT get ALL you want AS QUICK as you want with God's plan. He KNOWS what He is doing WAY MORE than YOU do. Trust God for your future...NOT YOURSELF. And things will ALWAYS turn out for the BEST! Why dont YOU try it?
5-06-2010 @ 12:51PM
Alicia said...A) God's got bigger things to worry about than who stays home with the kids.
B) Raising kids causes more sweat than a helluva lot of jobs left in America today do.
C) The bible was written (by *men* years after Jesus died) at a point in time when it was culturally and environmentally dangerous for women to be outside the home for long periods of time. We no longer live in that world and the bible must be read from the perspective that it reflects the time it was written and is not a viable rule of law for today's society.
D) Your sporadic capitalization makes your argument seem hysterical and ultimately detracts from your point.
5-06-2010 @ 7:49AM
decchamp said...What planet did this fool just arrive from? Has he been in a coma since 1958? Pull your head out and get some fresh air.
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 12:38PM
mielmani said...Wanna be more specific? Why is he a fool?
5-06-2010 @ 8:07AM
chazzer said...I agree, but as a single dad who has asked for equal custody it seems that the problem stems with our own government and legal system. How can we truly teach our children that men and women are equal if we aren't teaching them right from the beginning that parents are equal. Whether you want a 50's style life our something different if it doesn't work out the default should be equality of custody. Instead more common than not the mother gets more access which leads to a multitude of difficulties for the father.
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 8:08AM
richard nicoletti said...Why do we keep ignoring nature? A father has his place, but there is no replacing mother when a child is still helpless. Mothers are natural nurturers. Fathers are natural hunters. They are the spiritual head of the family. Sure, if a woman has to work, so be it. But don't try to tell me that leaving the old man at home while the wife works is the best situation, because it isn't. Ask any child.
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 8:21AM
chris said...whoa--I sometimes forget people still feel like you do--I know a lot of women who don't act/feel very maternal and I know men who are!! You are operating on the assumption that ALL mothers are loving and caring and warm and fuzzy. For the record, I am a woman who did stay home with my kids for years but my husband was just as awesome! A woman home with the kids who feels lost and resentful certainly doesn't do a better job than a man home who is happy with the arrangement.
5-06-2010 @ 9:10AM
e.c said...look around you - we're past that. we're not monkeys flinging our crap around at each other. i hate people who try to claim that men are just incapable of basic human emotion and nurturing instincts so they have an excuse to act like jerks and skirt their responsibilities. you're a human being, not just a "natural hunter." and for the record, i think your reply is merely thinly veiled insecurity.
5-06-2010 @ 9:56AM
Tom said...I'm a stay at home dad and I would agree to some extent with what you say. I wish my wife could spend less time at her job to spend more time with the kids and help out more with the household demands. My wife and I made a decision a few years ago to live this way for a few reasons. It was a natural fit for us for economic reasons. We adapted to our lifestyle to do the best for our family. Because I am more a disciplinarian, sometimes I do think it would have been better for my children to have me out of the house at work and have my wife raise the kids. I am a non-conformist and will not follow the crowd type of guy so it wasn't hard for me. It has been hard overall with my self esteem and dreading the question of "what do you do?" when I meet new people, so I sometimes seem anti-social to avoid the question.
5-06-2010 @ 12:06PM
IvoryPirate_EbonyBandit said...You are the man! I wonder what this world is turning into. Just because a fast buck is coming the ladies way then some chap things he should lean back and relax???! Hell no.
This is the same kind of stuff that leads to other social misfit talk such as g*y marriage, etc. Man is male. Get used to being a man and grab some honour to keep being man while at it! Thanks Richard.
I wonder who makes up this statistic. Good thing - it is a statistic (a sample of a much greater population of well meaning capable men)
5-06-2010 @ 9:13PM
Randy Thacker said...Ask my two boys. I stayed at home with them since they were born. I don't think they suffered.
5-06-2010 @ 1:56PM
Emma said...Ok, ask me. My dad stayed home with my brother and me for 13 years, from the time I was 3 until I was 16.
I am now 26 years old have been married to my wonderful husband for 5 years and we have two beautiful daughters 4 and 2 years old. I have a full time job, own my house, and pay the bills on time. My children are clothed, clean, and polite little girls. We do not live outside our income, we have no credit cards, car payments, or any debt outside of our mortgage.
Please explain to me how I had my life ruined because my dad stayed home and my mom went to work every day?
5-06-2010 @ 8:16AM
PghHikrChik said...Good article! Wish this information was out over 10 years ago! I divorced for this reason. The kids were brainwashed and manipulated to move in with him (as he was working this aspect for a few years) and took me to child support court, and wanted alimony too! That's what happens to Moms who work!
Reply
5-06-2010 @ 9:27AM
cheryl maglio said...I feel your pain thats because the man is a lazy sob and still is looking for you to take care of him My husband is the same way only he wont leave or take care of the kids