Dear family, friends and visitors,
Being a WMWASAHH seems to magnify your worst traits, turning you into a female chauvinist without you realizing it, like the goo that turns Spider Man into Venom. (Yes, it's true; since giving birth to two boys, all my cultural references are to comic book heroes.) When I started this blog, it was going to be about the qualities it takes to be a stay-at-home dad. Only it quickly began to sound like those books that used to instruct women how to be good wives. I was trying to praise my husband when I said "He's always been interested in fashion and clothes, so he's careful with the laundry and can pick out outfits for the boys." Huh!?! That's a compliment? Suddenly, I realized I was uttering the feeble praise of a closet chauvinist. What would he say about me? That I'm a very involved working mom, because I read to the boys every night? Somehow, the (im)balance between us didn't change, we just traded roles. This is a very uncomfortable position for me to find myself in, after years of examining the women lawyers' attempts to find work-life balance, and demanding equal commitment to home and family from men.
In my defense, though, C isn't a SAHD because of stereotyping or because his abilities are undervalued. He is a SAHD and I'm a WMWASAHH exactly because we are equal partners -- we are equal, so we are each able to throw off gender stereotypes and do what we together decided is best for our family. I'm working on reforming my female chauvinistic ways, and I think we're going to do all right.
Love, Christina
*For now, pronounce it WUM-wa-sah. Some day, when us WMWASAHH's are fully represented in society, someone will come up with a better acronym, at least one you can make into an easy-to-pronounce nickname like the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act (you're surprised I know what HIPAA stands for? You don't even know the amount of useless information I have stored in brain; now if only I could remember my wedding anniversary).
2 comments:
The thing about being a part-time working mom is that I feel like I'm both a stay at home mom and a working mom, which gives me the right to bitch about everything, and not feel badly.
Bahaahaaa..
PS. Did I miss the point?
Post a Comment