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Yarrow's avatar

Yes to everyone having choices.

But I think a lot of the angst over women in the workforce, in the US at least, is... an artifact of the most vocal feminists also coming from wealthy families. Money is where real choice comes from.

Feminism is for rich people. Work-life balance is for rich people. Choice is mostly for rich people.

For those of us in the working class, there has never been any real question of women working outside the home. Of course we do. If we are lucky, we have a grandma in the picture who is willing to take care of the kids. If not... every part of moms having outside jobs sucks elephant balls. It's not like we can hire domestic help to replace us at home, and no, men (however decent) are not going to take on an equal share of domestic duties. Having a job just means you work all day and then you come home and do the lion's share of the housework too. Oh, and paid childcare eats most of your paycheck anyway.

I quit my job to raise the kids. Not because we could afford it. But because we couldn't afford *not* to. We ran the numbers: took my anticipated paycheck, subtracted the cost of childcare for three kids, subtracted the costs incurred *by the job*, subtracted a large portion of the stuff I do at home to save us money, but would no longer have time for... and I would have effectively been working a fulltime job just to bring home $100 a week. A hundred bucks with a significant decrease in quality of life for all of us. Not. Worth. It. So we live on a shoestring, buy secondhand clothes, cook every meal at home, grow our own vegetables, and we are never gonna retire, but at least our kids get to have a fulltime parent, and we homeschool (the local schools are terrible-- this is the only way they'd get any education at all).

On the balance, I'm glad we did this. Yeah, we're poor. My mom was the breadwinner in my family, and this was a constant misery to all of us. She couldn't respect Dad (he worked day labor, she had a master's degree and a low-paying whitecollar career, and the family insurance plan), they despised each other, we spent a lot of time in daycare, and at the end of the day neither parent had much energy or emotional reserve left for dealing with kids. I'd rather die destitute than do that to my own children. That's a choice, too. I don't get the same set of choices as women with money, but I do get some. I'm choosing to do right by my kids.

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Mara's avatar

The elephant in the room is that work does not set you free.

The corporate environment is functionally indistinguishable from a feudal society.

So women who work have simply traded a domineering husband for a domineering boss.

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