Doversoul - I thought you were probably female, but wasn't sure.
So who is going to look after, talk to and educate the children, if the parents don't? Semi-educated childminders? Grandparents, who should be enjoying the freedoms of retirement? (If they haven't yet retired they can't look after grandchildren, and of course they can in any case only do it if they live near enough.) The school day finishes quite early, and there are long holidays. I see children being handed round like parcels, almost regarded as a nuisance, and parents panicking if the children are ill or the school has to close for a day or two. Schools aren't babysitters, but many parents seem to regard them as just that. I see exhausted grandparents caring almost full time for young children, and many of those I have spoken to are a lot more resentful of the situation than they would ever let their children know. It's all a bit sad. Children seem to come bottom of the pile of priorities.
I do know that two incomes are a financial necessity for many, though plenty seem to regard expensive cars and holidays as a necessity. I don't know what the answer is. If people find young children boring and looking after them demeaning I think it tells you all too much about the people. Poor kids. And if housework is demeaning, why is it right to expect someone else to do it? (Not that housework was ever a priority for me!)
I do see the point about being financially dependent. We always regarded the money we had (some of which had been earned by me) as shared, and I assumed we'd stay married - most people did then. Today with so many more couples breaking up, that is more of a worry, I suppose. I was never ambitious in the career sense, although I had a good job before I had the children, and being at home, as I said earlier, does not stop you developing your mind. It does stop you earning money (unless you work from home), but perhaps money isn't always the most important thing. That's probably a revolutionary thing to say in post-Thatcherite Britain.
So who is going to look after, talk to and educate the children, if the parents don't? Semi-educated childminders? Grandparents, who should be enjoying the freedoms of retirement? (If they haven't yet retired they can't look after grandchildren, and of course they can in any case only do it if they live near enough.) The school day finishes quite early, and there are long holidays. I see children being handed round like parcels, almost regarded as a nuisance, and parents panicking if the children are ill or the school has to close for a day or two. Schools aren't babysitters, but many parents seem to regard them as just that. I see exhausted grandparents caring almost full time for young children, and many of those I have spoken to are a lot more resentful of the situation than they would ever let their children know. It's all a bit sad. Children seem to come bottom of the pile of priorities.
I do know that two incomes are a financial necessity for many, though plenty seem to regard expensive cars and holidays as a necessity. I don't know what the answer is. If people find young children boring and looking after them demeaning I think it tells you all too much about the people. Poor kids. And if housework is demeaning, why is it right to expect someone else to do it? (Not that housework was ever a priority for me!)
I do see the point about being financially dependent. We always regarded the money we had (some of which had been earned by me) as shared, and I assumed we'd stay married - most people did then. Today with so many more couples breaking up, that is more of a worry, I suppose. I was never ambitious in the career sense, although I had a good job before I had the children, and being at home, as I said earlier, does not stop you developing your mind. It does stop you earning money (unless you work from home), but perhaps money isn't always the most important thing. That's probably a revolutionary thing to say in post-Thatcherite Britain.
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