Feminine mistakes
An article on the excellent News for Parents
site reports that an American writer has stirred up controversy with a
book arguing that mothers who don't work could be risking their
financial security, as well as their happiness.
In The Feminine Mistake,
Vanity Fair journalist Leslie Bennetts warns stay-at-home mums that
their decision to give up economic self-sufficiency and rely on their
partner could have disastrous consequences.
The book's title's an ironic nod to fellow American writer Betty Friedan's 1963 book The Feminine Mystique,
the groundbreaking work credited with launching the feminist movement.
The book attacked the idea a husband and children were all a woman
needed for fulfillment.
The latest book's stirred up a
hornet's nest in the US, where according to poor Bennetts, stay-at-home
mums are "burning up the blogosphere denouncing me". Last time I
checked there were no fewer than 68 heated reviews of the book on
Amazon alone, most of them huffy and defensive, all defending the
writer's personal choices on working or not working.
Bennetts,
herself a working mum, insists she only wants to alert women to dangers
in giving up work to rely on a partner's income, like divorce, or a
husband losing his job. My fellow blogger Omega Mum over at 3kidsnojob
can tell you all about the latter scenario in her entertaining account
of what happens when a husband loses his job, in their case through no
fault of his own.
Bennetts also says that women who take
career breaks planning to get back to work once the kids are ready
should know they will take a huge salary hit - and might not get back
to the same level at all. And there's also the sense of self-worth that
women can gain outside the home. Plus pension entitlement. I'll see
what she says about part-time work-at-home mums, and let you know about
that.
The report was mostly manna to my web-weary eyes after a
sorry day filling up the depleted Mother at Large household coffers.
But why do I need a US author I've never even met to validate my
parenting choices? Why do I need to read this to feel okay about how I
arrange my life? Am I the only mother who needs approval from a book
I've not yet read for choosing to work? I'd like to see a time when
women can make career decisions without reference to a battery of
parenting experts. Then again, maybe most women already do.
Posted
30 May 2007 22:44