hadespussercats wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:hadespussercats wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Warren Dew wrote:Things get better when the kids are older - or at least they're bad in different ways. I question Coito's idea that there's any time left over to try to find ways to earn money, though.
Trust me, people do it. Nothing is for everyone, of course, and I never phrased it as something that everyone would do. Hades asked me, specifically, and she was very clear on this -- she asked me about my life personally.
Moreover, I don't get what that whole "let me recite a story about a horrible day as a stay at home parent" is supposed to tell us. Is anyone unaware that there are good and bad days as a parent? Are we not aware that kids shit and piss and moan and cry? This is stuff people have dealt with for the entire span of human existence. I'd like to know what we're supposed to conclude from it. That an employed wife should write checks to her stay at home husband like he's hired help, because he has it so bad at home?
Ah, Coito, I was having fun. Forget it.
Me too. But, you were, it seemed to me, very serious about wanting to hear my answer to your question, in terms of "for me" and not as an in general "what I think most spouses ought to do" or what should be the law. You asked what I would do, personally, if I were a stay at home dad. I gave you an answer. I haven't gotten upset about anything, if that's what you're implying.
Well, my hypothetical was more detailed than "what would you do if you were a stay-at-home dad?" You weren't really responding to that. As evidenced by your earlier comment that SWMBO'd would take care of night feedings because she likes to breastfeed.
I answered your hypothetical. Now you're saying I haven't fully answered it because it was more detailed than "what would you do if you were a stay at home dad." Well, you posed a scenario and said what would I do in those circumstances. That's what I would do. And, you're arguing with me about it, telling me it's not realistic by virtue of the horrendous example you gave of a parent who on a typical day finds it impossibly to clean the house, go to the store, or even leave the house.
The example you gave rings true for people, of course, but not because, in my view, it represents a typical day, but because it encapsulates the stresses and problems associated with parenthood. It's one of "those" days. But, just as often, parents take the kids to the store without much incident -- in my experience - maybe yours is different, and I can't speak to that. Maybe everyone's is different than mine. I can't help it. You asked for my view of it, and I see it in a much more positive light than many, apparently.
hadespussercats wrote:
It doesn't matter.
As for this:
"Does that mean that an employed wife should write checks to her stay at home husband like he's hired help, because the day is full of horrible things? "
I wasn't suggesting that. At all.
What are you suggesting, then? I'm trying to keep on track with the conversation, which between you and I started with a discussion of the stay at home parent being paid, and you even asked me whether I thought the stay at home parent should receive some compensation from the wage earning parent.
I mean - if your example was merely to suggest that parenting can suck sometimes, and it's hard, then - well, I don't dispute that. It's most certainly true, and days like that certainly do occur.
hadespussercats wrote:
I wrote my little imaginary scenario because I think your image of your typical day at home with two small children is funny. Laughably naive, and sort of sweet.
Well, I find that insulting, and if we're going that route, then I find your story miserable, a tale of woe from someone who hates being a parent, because they see the day-to-day life with their children as a horror-story. The person you describe is nearing a breaking point, unable to organize the simplest things, like a bag to go out to the store with wipes and diapers and other necessaries. The person you describe can't seem to manage taking care of the twins and cleaning the house and buying groceries, so, it sounds like social services might be in order. Your "typical day" at home sounds like an unending misery, a hell on Earth. If my view of a typical day of parenting is different than yours, then I'm glad of it.
hadespussercats wrote:
I wasn't trying to convince you of some point of financial policy (and since I've already explicitly stated that I don't necessarily think one parent should pay the other an hourly wage, it's a little disappointing, and a little boring, that you decided to read what I wrote as propaganda for that end.)
All I'm getting at is of course what you wrote is what you'd want to do. But reality might come as a shock.
Look whatever you were trying to do, you asked me a question, and you posted a nice long admonishment of me for not answering "for me" and what I would do in my life. Then I go ahead and answer honestly, from the perspective of someone who is not inexperienced with children, despite your apparent implication to the contrary, and you then tell me that my answer is not reasonable. So, you give me another example, the woeful misery that you described, and you say that that's more like the "typical day" and then you went even further but called my answer - the answer you wanted -- is naive, laughable, et al? Well, since you don't know anything about my life, you don't know what you're talking about. And, since you wanted me to answer for MY LIFE, and not "in general" or the "typical day" of "spouses in general" then for you to move the goalposts and claim that the answer FOR ME was not representative of the typical day for you or others, and then call me naive and laughable, is really ridiculous.
Well, if your miserable example did not relate to the topic had theretofore been discussing, well, I do apologize. I thought there was a linear continuity to our conversation which was not there. Moreover, you admonished me (another admonishment) not to read into your "questions" as if I'm implying you hold a particular view. Well, same here -- I ASKED you if your example meant that you thought the stay at home parent should be paid. I didn't imply that you thought the answer was yes. But, I still don't know what your answer is in that regard. You don't "necessarily" think that one spouse should be paid by the other. Well, that's a little modifier that leaves open either possibility. So, if I may get an answer to a question of mine, since I've answered all yours -- what is your position on wages for stay at home spouses? Yes? No? And, if yes, who pays? Would you mandate it by law? Or, would you leave it up to the spouses involved? Why? Why not?