This topic makes me wonder-- is it implied that while a woman should not cause her roles of mother/or wife to usurped by other roles, does that mean it's okay for an man who is a husband and/or father to allow his role of being a breadwinner take precedence? I think of all the men who I have witnessed go to work and then come home to have their wives be at their bid and call, practically have their meals handed to them on a platter (I have literally seen that), and don't participate in the child rearing. One set of parents I saw the father barely participated in the child rearing, yet would undermine his wife's authority by encouraging poor behavior on his child's part.

I only worked with the child in the home but it was so frustrating to witness. I thought to myself "if this is what a 'woman's place' looks like, I want no part of it."
My husband believes that if he is able to take the car to get the oil changed, do some maintenance, shovel snow, etc. I need to be able to learn how to do those things too because as he puts it, he may not be around all the time to help me. I have also worked very long hours which required lots of physical labor that could be seen as "man's work," but I did it because we needed it. My husband is very wary of people who believe in "women's place," and "man's work," "woman's work" stuff because of what he's witnessed in his own family. He has an older relative who, after the husband died, was practically unable to do anything for herself because all she did was stay at home with the kids and was a homemaker. My husband doesn't want to me to be helpless, so I'm expected to be able to do the things he can do.