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Mom Envy


Thursday, January 24, 2008
By Starshine Roshell (Contact)
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You over there. That's right, you in the velour hoodie with the Venti Macchiato. I have to talk to you.

And you, too: The one dashing off to your car as fast as your pressed pencil skirt will let you run. Slow down for a second. You need to hear this.

Starshine Roshell

It's drop-off time at school and, like most mornings, little circles of stay-at-home moms are pooling by the gate, near the office, in the parking lot. In pony-tails and baseball caps, they make playdates, share stories about head lice and commiserate over soccer schedules.

A working mom skitters past in a tailored suit and gleaming pumps. She's late for a meeting, but dials up a smile for the chatter-clatch moms, who wave at her. One of them — a petite brunette with no make-up and a dollop of crusted oatmeal on her yoga top — hollers over her shoulder in a tone that wasn't intended to sound bitchy: "Wow. Don't you look nice."

But between those five seemingly innocuous words lies the ugly tension that exists between moms who punch a timecard and moms who don't. And it's really rather stupid.

God bless feminism, but an abundance of life choices can make a gal paranoid. Those who choose Plain Ol’ Mom as an occupation assume our suited sisters will secretly chide us for abandoning our professional potential. Those who opt for a paycheck figure our home-maker counterparts will tisk-tisk us for being selfish, or missing out on our kids' childhoods.

But it's not true and I'll tell you why.

A former desk jockey myself, I recently gave up the monotony of memos and mailrooms for the privilege of working at home. And while I still have deadlines, I'm able to linger longer at drop-off — abandoning my identity as a Mom With an Outrageous Dry Cleaning Bill and joining the ranks of the Moms Who Have Time to Schmooze.

What I didn't realize before I'd been on both sides is that it's not judgment that flows between the two camps. It's jealousy.

And, OK, a little bit of resentment. The mom who works all day has to choose, some mornings, between curling her hair and fixing her kids' lunches. She lost the opportunity to stop at Starbucks when she had to spend six minutes removing dog hair from her trousers with duct tape.

So after shoving her child out of the car with a half-hearted "Have fun at after-school care!" she can't fathom how the latte-wielding sweat suit set gets to stand around dishing dirt about the principal — she wants to dish dirt! and comparing gyms — she wants to belong to a gym! — when she has to be downtown for a conference call in exactly ... damn, three minutes ago.

Meanwhile, the ladies of leisure see in the blur of rayon running past them a symbol of grown-up life. They envy corporate moms for having a reason to dress up, an excuse to wear perfume and a watch. Just once they'd like to skip Pilates and go hang out in an office where people bring donuts for no reason. They wonder how their life might feel different if they were not the default chaperone for all second-grade field trips. If they were faced with interesting problems that couldn't be solved with a cookie, an ice pack or a time out.

But what if, instead of envying one another's choices, we supported them? Listen up, Leisure Mom: Tomorrow, raise your coffee in a toast to your amiga-in-pantyhose as she passes, and say "Go get 'em, Gorgeous!" Workaday Mom, be sure to shout back a genuine "Thanks for chaperoning the field trip today!" and invite your unhurried comrade to gossip with you over lunch.

Even better: Tell her she'll need to dress up.

For more, visit StarshineRoshell.com.

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So well said, Starshine! Great topic.

elaz (anonymous profile)
January 23, 2008 at 11:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Good try, but now I'll give you a kid's perspective. I've had both types of moms. The first on was the corporate mom who was in the banking business. When I got sick, I got drug along to the office all day and she let all her clients know what a bother I was. I was nothing more than an excuse, a pain in the butt, the tailhook on her career. Her job came first. Fortunately, she was such a terrible parent that the state took me away from her and sent me to live my father and my new mom.

Mom #2 quit her corporate away-from-home job to be a full time parent...kind of. Like you, she's a prolific author and works from home. She's home when I get on and off the bus. She meets deadlines for major magazines, yet manages to chaperone my school field trips. The big difference is that I come before her career.

You may think it's jealousy, but it's really choice. For career mothers, their jobs are more important than their kids...at least that's how the kids feel about it.

jessica_jones (anonymous profile)
January 25, 2008 at 9:06 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Not everyone has the luxury of working from home Jessica. As the middle class shrinks even fewer are able to be full time parents. Sometimes paying the bills comes first and we must have sympathy for those who want to spend more time with their children but can't.

Though I will concede that some parents don't know how to balance their work and parenting. Then there are those few parents who despite having very large bank accounts still feel the need to neglect their children for a career. For them I only have sympathy for their children.

tpaine (anonymous profile)
January 25, 2008 at 12:48 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I have to say that there are more parents out there that still see stay at home parenting as the easy way out. It's not easy. I gave up a career to stay home with my kids out of choice.
We don't have the luxury of a large bank account. We took a 2 income household and have made the choice that our kids and home come first.
I don't get a day off. Holidays and summer, as well as everyday of the week, are my work days. My time while the kids are at school is filled with the things that most working families pay for. Laundry, cooking, shopping and the big one, cleaning. I don't get paid a monetary amount to do these things. I get paid with pride that I can do it. I get paid with the love of my kids and the gratitude of my husband.
I have days where I wish beyond all wishing I was at work and not here at home dealing with screaming, mess making children that take me for granted and wish they were at after school daycare.
Then I remember that I was a latch-key kid with no supervision and not a whole lot of memories of my childhood that included my parents. I want my kids to remember me. I want them to appreciate how hard it is to be a parent/housekeeper/gardener/friend/confidante.
So, life choice it is.
I have done both and decided that I will stick with being a Domesticated Housewife.
I love my job.

firebrunette (anonymous profile)
January 25, 2008 at 5:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm sorry for Jessica's rocky start, but notwithstanding her particular experience, staying at home doesn't assure good parenting. Raising children to be productive, modest, compassionate and generous is hard work and I say good luck to all who are doing their best at it regardless of their work choices or necessities.

goodlife (anonymous profile)
January 25, 2008 at 5:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

As a work-at-home mom/substitute teacher, I agree with it all. I live in the in-between world of work and staying at home and feel the grass will always be greener in someone else's backyard.

Thanks for sending this shout out to women everywhere! I believe it has been a long time coming.

Amy Hanek
www.houseonthegladehill.blogspot.com

Amy_momofthree (anonymous profile)
January 29, 2008 at 1:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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