I mentioned this in someone else's thread, but thought I'd take it over here so as not to interrupt.
I'd be really interested to hear how other people feel about the effect that the medical lifestyle has on parenthood.
I guess I didn't give it a lot of thought before I became a mum...but I find that our roles have become really polarised and traditional. I'm not sure if I mind or not!? I've stopped work and DH is the sole breadwinner. There are plenty of days when DH doesn't even see his daughter, as his hours are so long. I wonder how she'll deal with that as she gets older... DH never gets up in the night (even during the first year, when DD was waking up 6-10 times a night) and I guess I went along with that because I figured that he needed his sleep to save people's lives. I on the other hand, became a bit of a walking zombie. It's funny how he could never hear DD cry in the night - but should the phone or pager go off, he shoots out of bed in a flash!
In some ways, it probably wouldn't have bothered me so much when living in Japan, because we were surrounded there by the "traditional" model of breadwinner dad and stay at home mum, but back here there seem to be plenty of men who can take significant time off after their partner gives birth, take carer's leave to support a sick spouse or child, come home early - or at a predictable time, and often even work from home to give their partner support. Of course, most of this is impossible for a doctor. I try to curb the jealous feelings when they arise!
I think being married to a doctor is one of the reasons (besides the difficult pregnancy/birth thing) that I lean towards having an only child. I didn't realise how hard it would be to do it on my own! I am filled with admiration for those who've gone ahead and had more.
I'd love to hear some other thoughts on this!
I'd be really interested to hear how other people feel about the effect that the medical lifestyle has on parenthood.
I guess I didn't give it a lot of thought before I became a mum...but I find that our roles have become really polarised and traditional. I'm not sure if I mind or not!? I've stopped work and DH is the sole breadwinner. There are plenty of days when DH doesn't even see his daughter, as his hours are so long. I wonder how she'll deal with that as she gets older... DH never gets up in the night (even during the first year, when DD was waking up 6-10 times a night) and I guess I went along with that because I figured that he needed his sleep to save people's lives. I on the other hand, became a bit of a walking zombie. It's funny how he could never hear DD cry in the night - but should the phone or pager go off, he shoots out of bed in a flash!
In some ways, it probably wouldn't have bothered me so much when living in Japan, because we were surrounded there by the "traditional" model of breadwinner dad and stay at home mum, but back here there seem to be plenty of men who can take significant time off after their partner gives birth, take carer's leave to support a sick spouse or child, come home early - or at a predictable time, and often even work from home to give their partner support. Of course, most of this is impossible for a doctor. I try to curb the jealous feelings when they arise!
I think being married to a doctor is one of the reasons (besides the difficult pregnancy/birth thing) that I lean towards having an only child. I didn't realise how hard it would be to do it on my own! I am filled with admiration for those who've gone ahead and had more.
I'd love to hear some other thoughts on this!
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