I have no issue with stay at home parents. I think if you can stay at home and spend time with your kids when you choose to that's fine. Most parents who do this seem to understand how amazing their lives are that they can afford to do this.
Then there are some who think the world should hold them up on a pedestal and ask "what the hell is wrong with working parents why can't they be as noble as me?"
We see this in bad advice columns that ignore everything working parents or single parents deal with in raising their kids and proceeds to lecture said parents on "How you're doing it wrong"
So here's the thing. Sacrifice is Noble. Doing what you want that directly benefits you is not. We know there is no harm on kids who have two working parents much of the world's population has this scenario. I know back when I was a kid they tried to tell everyone that us Latchkey kids were suffering but we read those articles and were left wondering if they had even met a latchkey kid.
Most of us spent quality time with our families. In fact most of us liked our parents more than our peers because for us they weren't on top of us all the time micromanaging our lives. Our parents raised but rather than treat us like children all of the way gave us more and more independence and responsibility so that when we were old enough we could survive on our own.
I can clean my own house, cook my own meals, pick out my own clothes and have been able to from before I was old enough to move out of my parents house. At age 15 my parents could leave on a business trip for a weekend and I could feed, clothe myself, get my homework done and not throw a loud raucous house party because that's dumb.
My point is that it's not hurting kids having working parents and thus "staying home" whey are healthy fully functioning people is not a sacrifice. Thus it's not noble.
This minority of parents who want everyone to think it is will tell working mothers to their faces what horrible people they are for making their kids come home to an empty house (You know like many adults do until they get married)
They want ticker tape parades because they figured out how to do what they want with their lives without having to sacrifice their quality of living and yet we should call that a sacrifice.
That's when it bugs me really when a person claims that something that benefited them without a single bit of suffering on their part is sacrifice.
For example (Not that I think this is noble) for two years I have been stuck living in a town with no jobs. An opportunity presented itself to crash on a friend's couch in my home city where I can find a job. I will be allowed to stay until I am working and then once working start moving towards getting my own place.
To do this I have to give up everything but the clothes on my back. (All of my stuff will be in storage at my mom's so I will get it eventually) I won't have any of the services I enjoy, TV, Netflix, anything. Every dime I earn will be put towards the goal of creating a stable life with a stable living environment.
I will be sacrificing a lot to make this work. But I also want to do this I don't want to be stuck living at my mom's because I can't afford anything else. I don't want to keep being so far away from my friends that I only see them every few months. I want to come home. Thus it's not noble. But it's full of sacrifices.
Sitting down and realizing that with little to no adjusting to your life you can stay at home with the kids when that is exactly what you want to do. That isn't sacrifice and it sure as shit isn't noble.
Working a double shift so that your kid isn't going to school from the inside of a homeless shelter? Now that's sacrifice. That's noble. Show some damn respect.
Then there are some who think the world should hold them up on a pedestal and ask "what the hell is wrong with working parents why can't they be as noble as me?"
We see this in bad advice columns that ignore everything working parents or single parents deal with in raising their kids and proceeds to lecture said parents on "How you're doing it wrong"
So here's the thing. Sacrifice is Noble. Doing what you want that directly benefits you is not. We know there is no harm on kids who have two working parents much of the world's population has this scenario. I know back when I was a kid they tried to tell everyone that us Latchkey kids were suffering but we read those articles and were left wondering if they had even met a latchkey kid.
Most of us spent quality time with our families. In fact most of us liked our parents more than our peers because for us they weren't on top of us all the time micromanaging our lives. Our parents raised but rather than treat us like children all of the way gave us more and more independence and responsibility so that when we were old enough we could survive on our own.
I can clean my own house, cook my own meals, pick out my own clothes and have been able to from before I was old enough to move out of my parents house. At age 15 my parents could leave on a business trip for a weekend and I could feed, clothe myself, get my homework done and not throw a loud raucous house party because that's dumb.
My point is that it's not hurting kids having working parents and thus "staying home" whey are healthy fully functioning people is not a sacrifice. Thus it's not noble.
This minority of parents who want everyone to think it is will tell working mothers to their faces what horrible people they are for making their kids come home to an empty house (You know like many adults do until they get married)
They want ticker tape parades because they figured out how to do what they want with their lives without having to sacrifice their quality of living and yet we should call that a sacrifice.
That's when it bugs me really when a person claims that something that benefited them without a single bit of suffering on their part is sacrifice.
For example (Not that I think this is noble) for two years I have been stuck living in a town with no jobs. An opportunity presented itself to crash on a friend's couch in my home city where I can find a job. I will be allowed to stay until I am working and then once working start moving towards getting my own place.
To do this I have to give up everything but the clothes on my back. (All of my stuff will be in storage at my mom's so I will get it eventually) I won't have any of the services I enjoy, TV, Netflix, anything. Every dime I earn will be put towards the goal of creating a stable life with a stable living environment.
I will be sacrificing a lot to make this work. But I also want to do this I don't want to be stuck living at my mom's because I can't afford anything else. I don't want to keep being so far away from my friends that I only see them every few months. I want to come home. Thus it's not noble. But it's full of sacrifices.
Sitting down and realizing that with little to no adjusting to your life you can stay at home with the kids when that is exactly what you want to do. That isn't sacrifice and it sure as shit isn't noble.
Working a double shift so that your kid isn't going to school from the inside of a homeless shelter? Now that's sacrifice. That's noble. Show some damn respect.
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