Sounds like hell to me. https://twitter.com/Rongwrong_/status/938007147392139264 …
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Seeing how my kids and others their age grew up with working mothers breaks my heart. Compared to now, our childhood with stay-at-home moms really was heaven.
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Replying to @Rongwrong_
In what way? I think some balance is needed. Its not good for kids to never see their mother (or their father) because they work such long hours but its not good for them to be her sole focus either. I'm not a fan of helicopter parenting.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
It was the opposite of helicopter parenting. Helicopter parenting came along years AFTER women had started working outside the home. We used to roam the neighborhood unsupervised, sometimes doing what we called "exploring."
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Replying to @Rongwrong_
OK. Did you mother need to be at home whilst you did that? Couldn't she go to work or have some kind of life of her own in this time?
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Yes, mothers needed to be at home to feed us and (some feminists might hate this) to give us attention. We weren't wandering around ALL the time. Also, because we weren't helicoptered, sometimes we needed emergence adult assistance, like when my brother fell down the storm drain
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Replying to @Rongwrong_ @HPluckrose
Also, roaming the neighborhood was something we did in a certain age range. We weren't out roaming around when we were two years old. We needed our mothers.
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Toddlers need consistent loving care, yes. I managed to work around my husband in evenings and at weekends and enlist the help of grandparents.
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