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- Jun 29, 2011
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Jennifer W|1321438780|3062814 said:So, the on-site child care is an incentive to be there 24/7?? Like, you don't need to go home, we're looking after your kids...work, already!
Seriously, I can't imagine how hard it must be,but I do I hope you can find a way to balance both parenthood and law, if that's what you decide to do. Maybe you'll be a trail blazer for family rights.
also goes for accounting firms not just law firms. I think they say they are pro work/life balance but it is never the case, it is just a corporate jargon to throw in their handbooks to make them feel happy that they are doing the right thing.MissStepcut|1321480298|3063180 said:Jennifer W|1321438780|3062814 said:So, the on-site child care is an incentive to be there 24/7?? Like, you don't need to go home, we're looking after your kids...work, already!
Seriously, I can't imagine how hard it must be,but I do I hope you can find a way to balance both parenthood and law, if that's what you decide to do. Maybe you'll be a trail blazer for family rights.
The firm I was talking about, only allows you to bring your child in the first 6 months after taking maternity/paternity leave. I guess to buy you some time when looking for a long term solution, and allow women to breastfeed?
I don't think the trail is ready to be blazed at all. I think women who sacrifice work in any way due to motherhood don't stand a chance at making partner or other "big league" legal career advancement. The only way I can see making it work is live-in help and a pregnancy with no or few complications.
Jennifer W|1321484629|3063243 said:Why aren't American women angrier about this? Why aren't American men with families angry too? It isn't just women who are losing out when there is no work-life balance - they might be losing the more tangible things, but their husbands are losing the right to be equal parents. They are going to be the ones who don't know what their kid likes to eat, who never do the bath and bed routine, who don't know where the diapers are kept, who have to be coached and instructed before they can be left alone with their own son or daughter.
I keep hearing people here saying they have to return to work or quit altogether when their baby is under 2 months old. 2 months? I can't imagine how hard that choice must be. Cannot fathom. DH and I were BOTH on family leave until our kid was 4 months old, then he went back part time with flexible hours and home working for her first year. It was so important to us to bond and settle in as a family, as two equal parents. It was every bit as important for him to have that time at home as it was for me to have it (and as it was for me to be able to return to my career with no detriment to my position).
Why isn't there more disquiet about this?
MissStepcut|1321480298|3063180 said:Jennifer W|1321438780|3062814 said:So, the on-site child care is an incentive to be there 24/7?? Like, you don't need to go home, we're looking after your kids...work, already!
Seriously, I can't imagine how hard it must be,but I do I hope you can find a way to balance both parenthood and law, if that's what you decide to do. Maybe you'll be a trail blazer for family rights.
The firm I was talking about, only allows you to bring your child in the first 6 months after taking maternity/paternity leave. I guess to buy you some time when looking for a long term solution, and allow women to breastfeed?
I don't think the trail is ready to be blazed at all. I think women who sacrifice work in any way due to motherhood don't stand a chance at making partner or other "big league" legal career advancement. The only way I can see making it work is live-in help and a pregnancy with no or few complications.
Bella_mezzo|1321503750|3063476 said:I'm not in law...I work for a high-profile non-profit in NYC. My previous company was fairly family friendly, my current company is not at all...
-no paid leave
-company pays 100% of individual's premium--which means in NYS that you are not eligible for any other insurance but your employers'--but employees pay the full remainder of their family insurance premiums ($1250/month we have to pay for my family)
-virtually no flexibility (completely unnecessary as I could do 80% of my job from home with a phone, computer, and internet)
-crazy boss who leaves me voicemails throughout the night (literally, 1 am, 3 am, 5 am, etc.)
JenW-I don't do anything about trying to influence global change in the US b/c I have no idea what to do and b/c I have to work right now (DH is unemployed) so I am afraid to rock the boat too much. but, I firmly believe the system sucks!!! I've written three other posts and deleted them b/c I can't quite articulate what I want to say, but really, the system SUCKS!
Circe|1321485088|3063247 said:Jennifer W|1321484629|3063243 said:Why aren't American women angrier about this? Why aren't American men with families angry too? It isn't just women who are losing out when there is no work-life balance - they might be losing the more tangible things, but their husbands are losing the right to be equal parents. They are going to be the ones who don't know what their kid likes to eat, who never do the bath and bed routine, who don't know where the diapers are kept, who have to be coached and instructed before they can be left alone with their own son or daughter.
I keep hearing people here saying they have to return to work or quit altogether when their baby is under 2 months old. 2 months? I can't imagine how hard that choice must be. Cannot fathom. DH and I were BOTH on family leave until our kid was 4 months old, then he went back part time with flexible hours and home working for her first year. It was so important to us to bond and settle in as a family, as two equal parents. It was every bit as important for him to have that time at home as it was for me to have it (and as it was for me to be able to return to my career with no detriment to my position).
Why isn't there more disquiet about this?
I.
Have.
No.
Idea.
If pressed, I would guess it was a combination of Extreme Capitalism - it's a sport, practically - and religious extremism that still pushes women to stay in the home, with a healthy dash of Feminism Resentment, where the Establishment (and dudes in power thereof) think, hey, you wanted equal rights ... and provide them in the form of equal suckiness for all concerned instead of granting a break across the board.
It's also a very me-me-me society: you'll frequently hear people who either don't have kids yet or who don't want kids period whining about how they feel it's unfair that Sally in accounting got 12 weeks of unpaid leave to recover from her c-section, but they're not allowed to take a snow-boarding holiday, with no consideration of the fact that, hey, when they're octogenarians, Sally's kid will be the one prescribing their medicine/driving their public care vehicle/replacing their cybernetic eye, or whatever.
Money, sexism, and an unhealthy focus on individualism: it's a bad combination. More to the point, though - to what would you attribute your country's shift towards egalitarian childcare practices?
Pandora|1321526939|3063617 said:If the vast majority of women on PS are unhappy about the maternity leave/work-life balance in America then that must translate into a HUGE number of women in the US being equally unhappy about it. What are your female politicians doing to help change things? Why aren't they angry on your behalf? That is where it has to start, with legislation. Women also need to start demanding better leave and better conditions.
Jennifer W|1321538568|3063675 said:VC10um, this sort of goes to the heart of my bewilderment - why don't male politicians have an interest in family life and equality? I understand it would be very hard to pass legislation that only women wanted, given the gender imbalance amongst those involved, but surely positive family policies benefit almost exactly equal numbers of men and women?
TravelingGal|1321548703|3063767 said:- BECAUSE I work hard, my boss is SUPER flexible with me. Never giving me any crap about all the appointments I had to take for my kid (and working from home, of course it was me that did it, but that's another story). Totally encourages family time. Tells me to take a lot of time off. But he also knows that's HUGELY valuable to me and makes a point of telling me when I'm sort of sick of our company and thinking about leaving that I have that in my job. It doesn't matter if I don't get promoted, or have big bonuses (and to be fair, none of the male colleagues do either as the company is not doing well), but he KNOWS I will not leave because I have it "good."
So I guess we are a "me" society. Even in my favorable working conditions, I know things are good only because I am a certain way in my job - which shouldn't have to be the case. And basically I deal with it because life is good for *me* in my job, but it doesn't promote the well being of motherhood and careers in any way.
Sad, eh?
Jennifer W|1321538568|3063675 said:VC10um, this sort of goes to the heart of my bewilderment - why don't male politicians have an interest in family life and equality? I understand it would be very hard to pass legislation that only women wanted, given the gender imbalance amongst those involved, but surely positive family policies benefit almost exactly equal numbers of men and women?
MissStepcut|1321549977|3063780 said:TG, the only thing that really bothered me about your post was the getting back to work 2 days after giving birth. That's a really common narrative among working mothers (or people who are praising them). It bothers me because, usually when I hear people saying it in praise of others, it sounds like some signaler of dedication. If you really were dedicated to your employee, you'd be working in the middle of labor! Work through your maternity leave! Give birth in the morning and be in the office by the afternoon! And okay, maybe that is impressive... but what about women who, due to medical reasons, can't bounce back like that? Or, heaven forbid, just want to take advantage of the benefits their employer promised them? Gah...
Circe|1321550285|3063784 said:Jennifer W|1321538568|3063675 said:VC10um, this sort of goes to the heart of my bewilderment - why don't male politicians have an interest in family life and equality? I understand it would be very hard to pass legislation that only women wanted, given the gender imbalance amongst those involved, but surely positive family policies benefit almost exactly equal numbers of men and women?
There's still a fair amount of contempt for activities associated with women here. Sadly, that extends from vapid nonsense like vajazzling to matters of crucial importance ... like child-rearing. I dunno about Scotland, Sweden, or the rest of the EU, but 'round these parts, men get complimented for "baby-sitting" their kids when they take them to the park, or cover for their wives while they do work-related things. A major portion of our advertising sends the unsubtle message that, a) men are incompetent, b) incompetent men can't be trusted with kids, c) incompetent men ARE big kids who need to be taken care of, and, d) women are nagging harpies who don't let them have any fun, just like their mothers, and that's why they should drink Bud (or whatever).
Conversely, women-type things - cleaning, child-rearing, etc. - are seen as simultaneously mind-numbing and simplistic. People who engage in them are lazy and dim ... a natural state for the ladies, but a condition of emasculation for the menz. And what sane man would legislate and/or vote for that? It'd be the social equivalent of slumming it.
We are so messed up.