The subtext to the wave of concern over the
recently announced epidemic of childlessness in successful
career women is that women can't have it all after all--and it's
men's fault. Why? Because men interfere with their wives'
career aspirations by their refusal to become their children's
primary caregivers, forcing women to sidetrack their careers if
they want children.
Despite the criticism, men generally focus on
their careers not out of selfishness but because most women
still expect men to be their family's primary breadwinners. For
women willing to shoulder this burden themselves, replacing the
two-earner couple with a female breadwinner and a stay-at-home
dad (SAHD) can be an attractive option. I became a SAHD with the
birth of my daughter four years ago, and the arrangement has
benefited my family immensely.
My wife and I sometimes remark that if we had
met in the era before women had real career opportunities, we'd
both be pretty unhappy. As a lone breadwinner I would feel deprived
of time with my children. My wife, an ambitious woman who loves
her career, would feel stifled as a stay-at-home mom. Since each
of us would want to be doing what the other is doing, we would
probably resent each other. Instead, the freedom to switch
gender roles has allowed each of us to gravitate towards what we
really want in life.
Men need not fear a loss of power when they
become a SAHD. While SAHDs are sometimes stereotyped as
being at the mercy of their stronger wives' commands, in
reality, I have more power in the family now than I ever did
when I was the family breadwinner. The most important issue in
any marriage is deciding how to raise the children. While my
wife is an equal partner in any major decision regarding the
children, I supervise the children on a day to day basis and I
make sure that things are done the way I want them done.
Women also benefit from SAHDs because, with
reduced familial responsibilities, they can compete on a level
playing field with career-oriented men. For men, it is an
opportunity to witness the countless magical, irreplaceable
moments of a young child's life, and to enjoy some of the subtle
pleasures our fathers never knew, like making dinner with a
three year-old's "help," or putting the baby down for a midday
nap in a hammock.
Still, there are adjustments that both men
and women will need to make. Women will need to discard the
popular yet misguided notion that men "have it all," and
understand that being the breadwinner comes with disadvantages
as well as advantages.
One disadvantage can be the loss of their
primary status with their young children. Mom is #1 not because
of biology or God's law but because mom is the one who does most
of the child care. This can change when dad becomes the primary
caregiver. When my young daughter has a nightmare and cries at 2
AM, my wife is relieved that she's not the one who has to get up
and comfort her. The price that my wife has had to accept is
that her child insists on being comforted not by her but by "yaddy."
Another disadvantage is that taking on the
main breadwinner role reduces a woman's ability to cut back her
work schedule or look for a more rewarding job if her career
disappoints her. This is one of the reasons many women prefer
life as a frazzled two-earner couple--keeping the man on career
track as the main breadwinner helps to preserve women's options.
Men will also have to make adjustments. For
one, they will have to endure the unconscious hypocrisy of a
society which often wrings its hands over the lot of the
housewife yet at the same time views SAHDs as freeloaders who
have left their working wives holding the bag.
SAHDs also have to contend with the societal
perception that being a househusband is unmanly. The idea is so
pervasive that even I still tend to think "wimp" when I first
hear about a SAHD.
Working women sometimes complain that men in
the workplace don't take them as seriously as they take men. As
a SAHD I have the same complaint. For example, last year I
attended a school meeting with my wife, my son's elementary
school teacher, and some school officials, most of whom knew
that I drove my son to and from school, met with his teachers,
and did his spelling words with him every day. Yet the woman who
chaired the meeting introduced herself to my wife, began the
meeting, and then, only as an afterthought, looked at me and
said "and who might you be?"
In addition, while many stay-at-home parents
face boredom and social isolation, it can be particularly acute
for SAHDs, since there are few other men at home, and
connections with stay-at-home moms can be difficult to
cultivate.
None of these hurdles are insurmountable, and
they pale in comparison to the benefits children derive from
having a parent as a primary care giver--particularly a parent
grateful for the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that he never
knew he wanted, and never thought he would have.
This column first appeared in
Newsday (5/22/02).
Glenn Sacks is a men's and fathers' issues columnist and
radio talk show host. His columns have appeared in dozens of
America's largest newspapers. His radio show,
His Side with Glenn Sacks,
can be heard every Sunday on KRLA 870 AM in Los Angeles.
Glenn can be reached via his website,
at
www.GlennSacks.com
or by e-mail at
Glenn@GlennSacks.com.