ValleyGal
Well-Known Member
- Dec 19, 2012
- 5,775
- 1,823
- Country
- Canada
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- Female
- Faith
- Anabaptist
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- Divorced
Having a stay at home mom is a historically recent idea. Traditionally, both parents have worked, whether it is in the home or out of the home. The ideal wife in Proverbs 31 worked outside the home. She started at home, then with the money she made, she bought land, expanded her enterprises and became a very lucrative business owner, in addition to managing those who worked for her at her home - likely those who worked for her to maintain her home, also were nannies to her children, although the Bible does not explicitly say this. It can be easily assumed, though, given the life expectancy of someone from that era.
I raised my son on my own, and worked outside the home. It was fine. The daycare he went to had plenty of opportunity for him to socialize and play, and I went to work. But when you sleep 8 hours a day, work 8 hours a day, there are still 8 hours you can spend with your children. My son helped me cook, clean, do yardwork, etc. We did homework together, we played games together. We had a very secure relationship. This is how it has been for eons...children work and play alongside their parents.
My uncle was a stay-home dad/husband. He had been injured in a car accident and working was painful, so his wife went to work and became the sole income earner. He stayed home, kept the house clean, took care of my cousins, cooked, and took care of all the errands like banking and paying bills. It was necessary for their family. If he could have worked, he would have. Both my parents worked outside the home and until they bought the farm, I was a latchkey kid. When they bought the farm, I worked outside with them. I was 11 years old. I turned out fine. Then, in the line of work I'm in, I am faced with numerous stay-home moms who do nothing, have no connection to their kids, and may even abuse or neglect them. They are at risk of losing their children, and they live in poverty so can't afford to put their kids into sports, etc. Very sad... we help them learn to have more effective parenting strategies and a greater connection to their kids.
So working outside the home or staying home does not matter so much as the quality of the relationship when you are with your children.
I raised my son on my own, and worked outside the home. It was fine. The daycare he went to had plenty of opportunity for him to socialize and play, and I went to work. But when you sleep 8 hours a day, work 8 hours a day, there are still 8 hours you can spend with your children. My son helped me cook, clean, do yardwork, etc. We did homework together, we played games together. We had a very secure relationship. This is how it has been for eons...children work and play alongside their parents.
My uncle was a stay-home dad/husband. He had been injured in a car accident and working was painful, so his wife went to work and became the sole income earner. He stayed home, kept the house clean, took care of my cousins, cooked, and took care of all the errands like banking and paying bills. It was necessary for their family. If he could have worked, he would have. Both my parents worked outside the home and until they bought the farm, I was a latchkey kid. When they bought the farm, I worked outside with them. I was 11 years old. I turned out fine. Then, in the line of work I'm in, I am faced with numerous stay-home moms who do nothing, have no connection to their kids, and may even abuse or neglect them. They are at risk of losing their children, and they live in poverty so can't afford to put their kids into sports, etc. Very sad... we help them learn to have more effective parenting strategies and a greater connection to their kids.
So working outside the home or staying home does not matter so much as the quality of the relationship when you are with your children.
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