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Why I Hated Being a Stay-at-Home Mom

Posted: 06/06/2012 3:54 pm

Written by Marisa Costa for LearnVest

Eight years. I've spent the last eight years of my life as a stay-at-home mom.

The thing is, I didn't quit my job to be a stay-at-home mom. I was pretty happy as a working mom. My two young children spent their days with a lovely nanny and my husband was doing more than his share of helping out with the kids and the house.

I really just wanted to see what it was like to stay home with the kids -- take a few weeks off to rethink my marketing career and re-energize myself as a working mom.

My, how time flies.

Now, a new survey has found that non-employed women with young children at home are more likely than their working counterparts to report experiencing sadness and anger.

This, of course, has me thinking back on my own situation, and realizing... I totally fit that bill.

What My Stay-at-Home Life Looks Like
As a stay-at-home mom with the heart and soul of a working mom, I made it a priority to weave professional "me time" into my busy days filled with housekeeping and childcare duties. I found time for freelance writing and tried to nurture my love of fiction writing. But no matter how much I tried to squeeze out more time for me, I always seemed to come up short -- and found anger and resentment tugging away at my happiness.

The worst part was I couldn't figure out why I was so angry and bitter. I found myself short-tempered with my kids constantly, overreacting when my 2-year-old age-appropriately spilled juice all over his brand new shirt, or when my 9-year-old daughter would forget to brush her teeth. I was frustrated with all the housework that seemed endless, no matter how hard I worked, organized and planned. Sure, my husband contributed to the housekeeping, but it was never enough. Like many couples, we found ourselves playing the "who does more" game and had to carefully manage the resulting friction.

I didn't have to be a stay-at-home mom. I could have gone back to work. But as I got more involved with the stay-at-home mommy culture (meeting friends at Starbucks for coffee after drop off, helping out during bake sales and other fundraisers, volunteering my time to help out in the classrooms, etc.), I was plagued with the guilt that staying home with my kids was the "right" thing to do. I told myself how lucky I was that our family was fortunate enough to live comfortably on a single income. I should seize the opportunity and enjoy it.

Plus, how could I go back to work in marketing or sales after having been out of the workforce for so many years? I felt stuck -- like I was falling deeper into a hole I'd never be able to escape.

How I Hid It... Well
But that was me on the inside. I suspect there are loads of stay-at-home moms who appear perfectly happy on the outside, but secretly wage internal battles with anxiety and depression.

On three different instances I was offered a Xanax by a mom to go along with our glasses of wine while accompanying my child on a playdate. I wouldn't say stay-at-home moms are handing out Xanax like candy, but it's definitely carried around in more than a few handbags.

Fortunately, I never allowed my spirits to fall too far, and I was able to ward off full-blown anxiety and depression when it beckoned. I made sure I went to the gym a few times a week and hired a babysitter for a little "me" time here and there. I refused to feel sorry for myself for too long, despite the fact that my plan of staying home with the kids for only a few weeks had turned into a few years. After all, I was choosing this.

Of course, there were many days I wondered why I was spending so much time folding laundry and organizing cabinets of sippy cups. After all, I had an MBA from NYU and had most recently held a senior management position at one of the most well-known publishing companies in the world. I just couldn't believe how much I'd changed as a person -- from the go-getter career woman that I once was to the tired, bored housekeeper that I felt like I'd become.

The frustration nagged at me but I mostly ignored it, distracting myself with volunteer work and other commitments that allowed me to interact with adults and made me feel like I was using my brain.

Deciding to Make a Change
Yes, I love my kids more than I ever imagined possible. I am grateful for each and every 9 a.m. school concert that I was able to attend, every 4 p.m. Brownies meeting I was able to lead and every weekday class trip I was able to chaperone.

There is no happiness substitute in the entire world for making my 2-year-old son laugh hysterically as I chase him around the playground, or playing catch with my son in the backyard after school. I savor these moments every day and know, without doubt, that these are the childhood highlights that I will look back upon fondly 20 years from now.

But all moms know there are times in life when something's gotta give. When you have to listen to your inner voice that tells you to make a change. To just go for it.

Baby Steps
Of course, change is never easy, and deciding to dust off a résumé and actually send it out with a cover letter was a daunting task, to say the least.

Last summer, I wasn't ready to just jump in full-time right off the bat, so I searched for a "baby step"-- something part-time or freelance to get me going in the right direction. After a few weeks of scanning the web for job postings, I found a maternity fill-in position that fit my job experience and skills perfectly -- Sales Director at a digital media company.

I applied for the job, got the interview and managed to deal with the stress of how I'd explain the gap on my résumé. I took the questions (and resistance) in stride, not ashamed to admit that I'd been a stay-at-home mom, but at the same time making a point of explaining how I'd kept abreast of the digital media industry and was very enthusiastic to start working again. I knew the most important thing was finding the right employer fit -- someone who was able to look at my past accomplishments and realize that I'm extremely capable if given the opportunity.

I was offered the job a few days later.

When that position ended in December, I was a new person. Boosted by the confidence gained in my temporary job and the surprising ease with which I'd been able to transition back to life as a working mom, I began to look for a full-time, permanent opportunity. My husband, who works in finance and is feeling the squeeze of the bad economy, was thrilled at the idea of adding another income stream.

From Full-Time Mom to Full-Time Job
Now, after eight years of devoting just about all of my waking hours to raising three kids (and after five months and 20-something interviews), I'm trading in my days filled with diaper duty, clothing struggles and mealtime disaster cleanup for a working mom's life of meetings, commuting and occasional missed bedtimes.

Yes, as of this past Monday, June 4, I'm working for a digital media company as a sales director.

Will I be happier with my new life as a working mom? According to the Gallup Poll, the odds are in my favor. In addition to the sadness, anger and depression that stay-at-home moms allegedly feel, the poll also found that employed moms are about as happy as working women without children.

No study such as this would ever convince me that work is the answer to every woman's happiness. It is a personal choice, and one that I'm approaching with my eyes wide open.

Am I excited to start my new job? Heck yeah. Nervous? Heck yeah. Is going back to work full-time really the answer to my ultimate fulfillment and happiness as a mom? Time will tell. I would have preferred to find a part-time job that offered me more work-life balance and the same upside potential and benefits that a full-time position does, but those gigs are about as hard to find as Barbie's earring in a bucket of Legos.

In today's economy, I'm just thrilled to be able to actually land a good job. And, hey, what do I have to lose? If this job doesn't work out, I know my current employer will be happy to take me back.


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Written by Marisa Costa for LearnVest Eight years. I've spent the last eight years of my life as a stay-at-home mom. The thing is, I didn't quit my job to be a stay-at-home mom. I was pretty happy a...
Written by Marisa Costa for LearnVest Eight years. I've spent the last eight years of my life as a stay-at-home mom. The thing is, I didn't quit my job to be a stay-at-home mom. I was pretty happy a...
 
 
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11:56 AM on 07/22/2012
First off, how dare working mom's or SAHM's accuse the other of not loving their children? That is a rude and disgusting stigma to place on any mother. I do, however, tend to hear this more from SAHM's towards working mom's. SAHM's you have the benefit of being home to clean more, play more, drive your kids back and forth ETC. Is that how love is measured? Is that what being a mother has to be all about? Is it not love for a widow to work hard full time to feed her children instead of giving up and getting on the government dime? Is it not a mothers love when some moms choice to work, so they can contribute to sending their kids to a better college, or help pay to raise them in a safer neighborhood? Is it not the result love a mothers love when her children grow up to be independent and ambitious like her? On a diffent note: There is also the possibility that a good husband/father may loose his job. SAHM's what will you do? Sure you maybe able to return back to find work, while your hubby is out of work, but at what price? Will your children go without while you and your hubby figure it out? At least with two working parents a family won't take such a devastation if one looses their job like a family with a SAHM. SAHMS, your way is not always the right way.
02:17 AM on 06/12/2012
I'm a stay-at-home mom with a small business. No amount of money could make me decide to leave her raising in the hands of a nanny. Having my child's memories of her boo-boo's being bandaged by Mommy or Daddy is far more important than having more money but her memories being with a nanny. When I worked in a day care, a mother brought in her son early one morning and neglected to tell us he'd been sick all night. When we found out he was sick and called her, she told us he was sick all night but why was it a big deal, and no, she wouldn't pick him up until the usual time. Then she had the gall to be mad that her son, who'd spent the day in my lap in a room separate from the other children, cried and reached his arms back to me after I'd handed him to his mother.

The stay-at-home moms who are depressed are those who don't have time with their friends or activities outside the home. It can be isolating spending all your time associating only with children. Taking a class or two, going out for coffee, etc., help tremendously, and I think it's unfair of you to lump all stay-at-home mothers into the same category when the truth is there is a lot of variation, and that variation makes all the difference.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
08:04 PM on 06/12/2012
AMEN!!!!
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Mollyannie
Thinking "I can't" guarantees failure
05:03 PM on 06/10/2012
It is good to live in a time of choices.
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02:58 PM on 06/08/2012
No internal battle here. Spent most of my adult life staying at home and raising 4 children into functioning adults with no help other than family. Never did I feel that it was the wrong decision but it was more difficult than leaving them home with a nanny and skipping off to the office. Being a parent does mean sacrificing and putting in long, exhausting hours but the rewards are well worth it and would do it all over again with no regrets! If you cannot find joy in parenting, my advice is to stick with pets!
02:13 PM on 06/08/2012
Then don't have kids.
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Tobi LS
I'm a nerd who works in a law firm.
03:38 PM on 06/08/2012
So if a parent chooses to have kids, that parent MUST be a stay-at-home parent? I'm genuinely curious as to what you mean.

This woman doesn't hate her kids, but she did struggle with being a stay-at-home parent. That's what this article is about.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:14 PM on 06/11/2012
Since you flagged my post to you I figured I would find you and respond to your nonsense.

“I see that you avoided truly answering the question. I am not surprised though.
Just remember, a parent is a parent is a parent.”

I did answer you. A father has a role and a mother has a role. The father GOES out of the home to make a living and the mother STAYS HOME to teach and train her OWN kids. A mothers role is AT HOME.

A fathers role is to PROVIDE OUTSIDE the home for the kids. This is a complete and happy family.
02:19 AM on 06/12/2012
Children should be raised by a parent when it's financially possible to make due on one income, yes. Especially in the formative years, do you really want your child's influences to be a nanny? If your child is with a nanny five days a week, that child will rack up more hours under someone else's guidance than your own. Why have children if your plan from the get-go is to run off and work when you can get by one one income?
07:22 AM on 06/08/2012
Great article! you described perfectly the internal battle every stay-at-home mom deals with. Your kids are going to do great, and you will achieve a good balance. The guilt might rear its ugly head now and then, but remember you are a great example for your children.
02:52 PM on 06/09/2012
Not EVERY stay-at-home mom. I'm perfectly content to stay at home and raise my children that I chose to have.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:16 PM on 06/11/2012
I have no internal struggle over stay at home. I fear for my families well being when I had to work. My kids are MINE to raise. I don't want someone else taking care of them for 8-10 hours a day or more depending on your commute and work hours. That is the better part of their day. So you think a mother is still raising her own kids if all she does is give them dinner and puts them in bed at night. Her mere 3-4 hours at night can not compete with the 8-10 hours they are with someone else. That is NOT raising your child. That is baby sitting and paying someone else to raise them for you.
02:29 AM on 06/12/2012
I used to work at a daycare, and of the 14 kids we had (family home daycare, not a large center), 10 of those kids came in before 7am, all still in their pajamas, and we had matts out on the floor for them to fall back asleep. We dressed them and helped them with their teeth and fed them breakfast. We fed them lunch and their snacks. Of all the children who came in that early, only 9 were picked up before 6pm. Of the kids who came in after 7am, only 2 were picked up before 6pm. Within 2-3 hours of most children's bedtimes, we still had 11 of them. Since a few were toddlers, we had some of them until it was close to bedtime. One mother even brought in her son she knew to be sick who we thought was just tired since it was 6am, and then she was angry when he cried and put his arms out to me after I handed him over to her at the end of the day. It was MY lap he had been comforted in all day after she refused to pick him up.

None of the families we provided care for were poor. This was a high-end area, and having work info on all the parents, we knew they all worked at high-paying jobs. All of them could have gotten by on single incomes, even if it meant downgrading the
02:29 AM on 06/12/2012
mansion and putting caring for their own kids first. But prestige in being a two-attorney household was the priority. And so we raised their kids 5 days out of the week from before they were awake for the day until very close to their bedtimes.

Who had more of an influence in those children's lives, their parents...or us?
02:46 AM on 06/08/2012
Someone here was finally honest-
"I went from a woman of the world, to a mom"
That's the whole point of not only motherhood, but parenthood as well. Your own wants and desires are no longer important or relevant. There is no "me time". It's no longer about YOU. If you are troubled by this, you shouldn't have bred.
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Catriona
Wha daur meddle wi me?
04:33 AM on 06/08/2012
I always worked, and my kids are turning out fine. (Eldest one is a surgeon. No2 son is a biochemist. And so on....)

American kids need less obsessive Mommy, and more 'you're a part of this family too, so get up and help'.
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NorthernBorder
07:05 AM on 06/08/2012
Dont forget its YOU who did it! ( I have 1 brilliant Googler in charge of se asia and africa and 1 architect in Spain both ret Captains in army - one straight out the movies neither would stand on an ant)
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:20 PM on 06/11/2012
LOL... Really??? I love how every mom that works has a child that is a DR or scientist. LOL... Every mom on here that works brags there kid is turning out fine. The statistics are against you. Latch key kids are proven not to turn out so well. My mom worked 3 jobs and I can tell you I would NOT have gotten into so much trouble had she been home to raise me. LOL. My kids I stay home with and they are well rounded. Healthy, happy and respectful of others. They have NEVER been abused or sexually molested and they have never been taught the ways of the world. They are amazing young ladies that don't have a void where mom should be.
09:49 AM on 06/08/2012
I think you are pushing too far in the other direction. No more "me time", no more "couple time" breeds unhappy marriages, divorces, and spoiled and entitled kids.

My mom was a SAHM. She still had "me time" and "couple time". They insisted we were PART of the family, not the center of the family!
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:23 PM on 06/11/2012
I so agree with you on this. There is a balance. I have me time and my husband takes the kids so I can and vice versa. We just don't EVER get outside help from strangers or even friends. My kids are with me or my husband 24/7. My mom on occasion as she likes grammy time but only with her never at a day care, preschool or even elementary school. When they hit high school is when I introduce them to the outside world as by then they are able to comprehend right and wrong and know the consequences. My job is to train my child in the way they should go not leave it up to strangers or a system or society to do that for me. We see how that is turning out.
02:46 AM on 06/12/2012
A child can be the center of the parents' world without parents sacrificing each other. My husband and I still have us-time and time out doing our own thing because, even though our daughter IS the most important thing in our lives, it's important for her to see the importance in relationships having involvement and that it's okay to be individual. Me-time and couple-time are important examples to set, and can be done without making the child less important than yourself or your spouse.
12:46 AM on 06/08/2012
Choices such as this are individual/couple's decisions. No one should judge what is right for any one family--we don't know what anyone's individual lives are like or what goes on behind closed doors. There are plenty of unhappy working moms & plenty of unhappy stay at home moms. This author is just giving her situation and her opinion. Everyone is different.
12:07 AM on 06/08/2012
After three years of the recession, and a new 2-year degree, I am back at work in my original field of engineering. The thing is I am so much happier, and so is my kid. Despite having been a full time engineer, I practiced attachment parenting and did the whole breast feeding thing. No nannies, no nearby relatives, but good group daycare. My 9 year old helps out way more with chores then I ever did when I was a kid with a SAHM. The secret to happiness is don't bite off more then you can chew. I knew I wouldn't be happy at home, so I never planned to have more then one kid.
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Catriona
Wha daur meddle wi me?
08:50 PM on 06/11/2012
I'm also an engineer, and I'll be your first fan.
11:42 PM on 06/07/2012
Huh? Whats the problem? No, you can't have everything you want. But you can certainly be happy...

healthly children. check.
food. check.
shelter. check.
clothes. check
electricity, power, computer, time to worry and blog. check.

Your life is fine. Take a trip to Cambodia for some perspective.
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NorthernBorder
07:08 AM on 06/08/2012
Just come back - Tuk Tuk - no check yet
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11:20 PM on 06/07/2012
Yes, and I hate paying for a lazy ex-SAHM with a graduate degree from Harvard who doesn't want to work full-time. But her legal privileges compel me to do so.

You American ladies have it real good - you can complain about working or staying at home and either is an option for you!
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Tobi LS
I'm a nerd who works in a law firm.
03:40 PM on 06/08/2012
You should always be careful when incorrectly speaking in extremes. Not all of us complain. I love my career.
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04:01 PM on 06/08/2012
And it is at your option if you choose to divorce whether you can profit from your career or from your ex-husband.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:26 PM on 06/11/2012
LOL... Sounds like you let a good woman go. First families first. What did you do wrong that she is now your EX. She will have plenty of time to use her degree when her kids are raised until then her time is much more appreciated and needed at home. You are just bitter as you have to pay for a family you created and no longer wanted. Oh well serves ya right.
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wildanimalover
07:58 PM on 06/07/2012
People for years have said that women who choose to remain childless (childfree?) are selfish. I think this 'mom' is being selfish. Women who want to be working instead of raising their children should never have children in the first place.

I think being a stay at home mom is a wonderful 'job' and those that are happy raising their children are probably doing a great job and should not be looked down upon or belittled for their choice.
12:18 AM on 06/08/2012
Perhaps you should not look down upon or belittle her choice. I am a stay at home mom by the way.
01:39 AM on 06/08/2012
All you have to do is be out in the world for awhile to recognize that most mothers and most parents are not doing a good job, much less a great job. It's devolutionary out there.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:34 PM on 06/11/2012
I disagree. The stay at home moms I know that are married to the father of the children have far happier home and the kids are great.
07:09 PM on 06/07/2012
I work part-time and am a full-time grad student as I plan to re-enter the work world after 11 years raising my kids. The phrase that struck me was "plagued with guilt." Why is it that women always feel guilt about every thing they do or do not do? Just banish that word/emotion. It serves no purpose. If you regret something, don't do it. If you want to do something and feel it is right, then do it.
09:52 AM on 06/08/2012
I know. I've never felt guilty about working. I didn't feel guilty (towards work) about going part time.

I've heard "Don't you wish you took more time off? Don't you want to quit with #2?" Well, no. I know my own personality. The only regret I have is that I went back to work FT with #1 and was sick as a dog over the winter because I was worn out.

So, I'm not making that mistake with #2, I'll be returning part time.
02:25 PM on 06/08/2012
Good for you!
03:02 AM on 06/12/2012
Guilt prevents us from repeating what we feel are mistakes. If you took your little brother's cookie because you wanted it and you quickly ate it and he cried, it probably would make you feel guilty, and so you wouldn't do it again. If you never feel guilt for anything you've done, then you lack a conscience.
01:40 PM on 06/12/2012
You can call it guilt, but I call it remorse. Regardless of the verbiage, the feeling should produce a change in behavior. If there is a continual feeling of guilt, but no change in behavior, then there is a problem. Many, many women walk around with nebulous guilt feelings. My point was, find the thing you feel "guilty" about, change it or don't, but it is a curious piece of female socialization that allows women to indulge in extended feelings of guilt over everything. Oftentimes, we feel guilt over things we cannot control. If you have to work a job so your kids can eat, you do NOT need to feel guilty that you are not a lunch mom volunteer. I don't like the word guilt, and prefer to replace it with "remorse" simply because guilt has become something that we feel without an appropriate change in behavior, therefore serving no purpose.
06:23 PM on 06/07/2012
The worst part about the internet mommy wars is this: I've found that the same rabid "you shouldn't work and let someone raise your kids" moms also fall into the "let them eat cake" category in the case of job loss, health care, welfare, and food stamps. On one hand, you shouldn't work. On the other hand, if your husband loses his job - suck it up, too bad, lose your house, clearly you were doing something wrong, wait I don't want MY taxes paying for YOUR kids. Can't win either way.
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cazsue
logic and compassion = liberal
02:49 PM on 06/08/2012
F&F! I also noticed that too.
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Kimberly Smith Linn
07:42 PM on 06/11/2012
When my husband lost his job I went back to work for 3 years to allow him time to get into his new job and build back up to being able to care for us on his own again. I am a help mate to my husband. My role is at his side. When I am able I stay home. That is my first choice and desire. The entire time I worked my two girls ages 12 and 14 at the time begged me to stay home. It was not an option. They saw the loss of not having me there with them to meet every need and to train them. They were lost without me. I am again back home as my husband has worked his way back up. He is a fighter and an amazing provider. He knows his role and performs it well and I my role as wife and SAHM
06:22 PM on 06/07/2012
It's such a personal thing. I am not wired to be a SAHM. I'm just not. I know this. And...I'm still a good mom. I still read to my son, play with him, pack his lunches, bake muffins for his class, go to field trips. I think the "mommy wars" are something that the internet has brought upon us.

Sure, I've met one or two judgmental SAHMs. But only 1 or 2. And come to think of it, they are working again. But there are many more on the internet, where you can't see or touch people, and you can just ... judge. You don't see the sacrifices that WOHMs make. You don't see what they feed their children. You don't see how they interact. You don't know what projects they take on for the school. You just judge.

And it's a 2-way street. WOHMs often judge SAHPs as lazy. But in real life? I know the SAHPs in my school basically run the PTA. There is no way that we would raise the money we need for computers and art and science without them (though remember the WP's are involved too and I personally wrote a fat check.) It's all too easy to judge nameless, faceless people than it is to meet people and judge them.
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12:47 AM on 06/12/2012
WAHFs: the future of civilization.