Posts Tagged ‘parenting’

Prediction#6: Mr. Mom

Friday, February 5th, 2010

In case you missed our Six Work Life Predictions for 2010, here’s a repeat of #6:

6. Mr. Mom issues. Fathers will increasingly reassess their roles in the workplace and family. Women now make up 50% of the workforce, and more of them became the primary household breadwinners after recessionary layoffs hit men in disproportionate numbers.

Studies show millennial men and women are equally career-focused, meaning traditional gender roles will be less defined in younger households.  And men are already winning primary custody in half of all disputed divorces. We’ll see greater awareness that work and childcare conflicts are a family issue, not just women’s concern.

Now jump over to yesterday’s The Juggle at the WSJ: Do Work Life Policies Discriminate Against Men?

Sue Shellenbarger writes that dads are angry they’re not getting the same access to child care help, paid family leave, and bring your babies to work policies.

But the problem isn’t so much that men are officially excluded from these policies, it’s a perception….a perception that these policies are for mothers only and that men (and all non-parents for that matter) belong at their desks, clocking regular hours.

That’s just not the reality of today’s modern family.  Fathers are active parents.  Fathers are often primary parent.  Or, fathers may be the primary parent on Tuesdays and Thursdays and every other weekend. Get it?  The family has changed.

And if your workplace culture perpetuates the assumption that women are the primary caregivers and therefore the only ones who really need flexibility, then you’re alienating and undermining the other half of your workforce.

It’s an issue dads need to step up and get vocal about.  From “Work Life Balance is not a Woman’s Issue” in The American Prospect last fall:

We have to stop using “work/life balance” as coded language for “working-mom stress.” Despite ample evidence that men are served by investing more time and energy outside the workplace and coming out as fathers while in it, there are very few men who are taking on this issue in a substantive, political way.

So keep speaking up, fellas.  But you have to do more than write angry blog comments on The Juggle.  You have to be an advocate at work and you have to model the way.

Gender Neutral Parenting

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Sarah Palin is facing some criticism for seeking a high-profile, high-obligation job while she has a young infant at home. Criticisms like those are unjust as they are unfairly leveled at women and not men.

The feminist movement earned women the right to choose career or family or career and family. Likewise, it earned men the same options.

When Palin was elected governor of Alaska last year, the Anchorage Daily News indicated her husband was taking a leave from his job to spend more time with the kids.

“At home, [Todd] Palin takes care of the cooking, the bills and other domestic paperwork, in addition to driving the kids to extracurricular activities like basketball and soccer, according to his wife.

“He can go on just an hour or two of sleep a night. He says, ‘I can sleep when I die,’ ” said Sarah Palin. “There is no way I could have done this job without his tremendous contributions to the home life. He’s able to keep it organized, like a well-oiled machine.”

This weekend, Andrea Kay, syndicated column for Gannett, pointed out that more men are requesting paternity leave. She cited statistics that showed 71% of fathers with a child under age five took paternity leave when it was offered.

Kay writes in defense of the Federal Employees Paid Parental Leave Act (H.R. 5781) currently before the Senate. It would provide federal workers entitled to FMLA leave with four weeks of paid parental leave. President Bush threatened to veto this legislation in June, just before it passed the house.

“If we are to retain the best workers whose priorities include quality of life and being a hands-on parent, a serious look at alternative working options is in order,” Kay writes. “It’s not just a woman’s issue or a man’s issue. It’s a business issue.”

That’s right. It’s not just a woman’s issue.

For information on shared parenting models visit Equally Shared Parenting and the Third Path Institute.

Posted by Jaime