Quick! Zoe is going to sleep. That means I have 45 minutes to an hour and a half to do whatever what I want! Hmm...should I work? Play XBox before the wife gets home? Write a blog?
I'll write a blog!
Welcome to Wednesday! Hump day. And what a hump day it is. Tomorrow is Zoe Toe's 5th Birthmonth! You know those posts include a lot of pictures and videos. :) We've got some great ones you haven't seen yet.
Ok...so far this blog is a flop.
Yesterday's blog, however, was apparently a hit. I don't wanna go all high school on everyone, but when you say the word "friend" people start thinking "oh, is he talking about me? or so and so?" Who cares? Friends come and friends go. My door is always open to anyone I've ever called a friend and I will always consider YOU a friend no matter how much time lapses between our visits.
That being said, a friend of mine sent an article my way that I found interesting. An interesting quote: "I think they [Dads] should also be encouraged to stay home with the kids. In fact, we should celebrate it. In the grand sweep of American lifestyle choices, stay-at-home fatherhood is possibly the only one that doesn’t get eulogized in our popular culture. I want to see the Bachelorette questioning her suitors on how many years they’d be willing to set aside for full-time childraising. I want a movie in which Matt Damon stays home while BeyoncĂ© goes out to work. He can capture an escaped terrorist during the hours when the kids are in preschool."
And another: "But I’m seeing a long road ahead in which women are more and more likely to be the primary wage-earner in a family. Already, nearly a quarter of wives make more money than their husbands. And husbands are certainly taking more responsibility for chores and childcare than they did back in the day. But men who are the primary caregivers — out of choice or because they’re unemployed — are often looked upon as losers.
It would seem to me that a country that spent so many generations celebrating the stay-at-home housewife could work up a little enthusiasm for the full-time dad. Just saying."
I definitely don't consider myself a loser. The exact opposite, I think I'm awesome! And I'm not unemployed. But I get the point that a lot of working class, older men do look at stay at home dads as "losers". I've felt that from men in suits walking past me as I push a stroller in sweats. It's just judgmental a-holes who I'm glad I don't work for (or look like) anyway! Who cares what they think?
You can read the entire article/conversation here. Thanks for the lead, David!
I think this blog came out alright in the end. Copying and pasting a couple paragraphs in the middle certainly did help a little!
Have a good one!
-marc
p.s. the picture has absolutely nothing to do with the post ... but it's such a cool picture, don'tchya think?
