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Parenting stereotypes, and turning them on their head. “My mom is a doctor, my dad is a dad.”

Last updated on March 15, 2019

“My mom is a doctor, my dad is a dad.”

So stated one of our children in their autobiography assignment for school.

I read on, curious what would come next.

“My dad usually stays home and cleans up, and takes care of the pets.”

I thought for a moment.  “That’s very good, honey, but do you think you could write something else about Dad? He does other stuff too, add some more nice things.”

“Ok, how about … ‘And he takes care of us, because my mom works all the time.’”

Ugh, not exactly what I was going for.

I tried not to show any hurt feelings on my face.  “Honey, I don’t work all the time, do I?”

He thought hard and then responded, “Oh, I know, I know!  How about this – ‘He takes care of us because our mom works most of the time.’”

His face beamed with pride at his adaptation.

And so that is how it reads in the final draft he turned in to his teacher.

I can’t wait to see it up in the hallway at parent-teacher conference night.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the role-reversal of parenting stereotypes when the woman is the full-time bread-winner and the man is the stay-at-home-parent.

The following are a few examples from our lives.

One of my favorites is from about 10 years ago.

It was a weekend and we were both home.  The phone rang and my husband answered. (yes, back then we used an actual landline).  It was the preschool teacher calling to tell us about a change in schedule.

A few moments later my husband handed the phone to me with a frustrated look on his face.  “She insists to talk to ‘my wife.’”

I took the phone and listened to the teacher’s detailed information about a schedule change.  After the call I relayed the information back to my husband, who was the one who really needed to know it, as he brought our child to and from the preschool.

“Strange, she absolutely insisted to talk to you,” my husband said.

We then burst out laughing as we realized it was because the teacher held to the parenting stereotypes that the father wouldn’t be involved in school schedules, and couldn’t possibly be trusted with the new information.  With us, she had definitely gotten it backwards.  Although we laughed about it, I could tell my husband was irked.

That was approximately 2007.

Around 2009, during the time of the financial crisis, I noticed that my husband was no longer the only stay-at-home dad in our children’s schools.

An interesting thing happened — with the economic slow-down, many couples with children were making the choice for the woman to keep her job while the man stayed at home.  It was a welcome change to no longer be the only ones we knew in this situation.

As our children have advanced in school, and society seems to have adapted a bit more over the past decade, a situation of parenting stereotypes like above with the teacher hasn’t repeated itself.

Now my husband gets all the texts from teachers and coaches, and I rely on him 100% to keep track of our kids’ schedules.  To be honest, at times I am downright envious to be the parent least in touch with the classrooms.

I have been subjected countless times to the comment, from both teachers and other parents, “So, you’re the mom!”  As in, “so, you really do exist.”

They say it with a grin but I don’t understand why, as it is not funny, it is hurtful, and, dare I say, gender bias.  I don’t think working fathers are subjected to this type of commentary when they come to a parent-teacher conference, even if it is the first time the teacher has ever met them.

But for a working mother, others can’t seem to wait to rub the salt in the wounds of guilt.

Flipping it around, I don’t think it is likely that a mother has ever been told by a teacher on the phone, “I can’t talk to you — let me talk to your husband so I can tell him about the school schedule change.”

Another example of being stereotyped by other parents:

Some years ago, in picking my child up from kindergarten, the one day a week I could do this with my schedule, another parent eventually admitted to me that she and the other moms had thought for the whole first quarter that I was the nanny, since they hadn’t seen me at any other activities.

Outwardly I laughed along, but inside my heart was bleeding.  Ouch.

My husband and I never sat down and planned that he would become a stay-at-home-dad, it just evolved as our family grew.  We realized life was a teeny bit less chaotic, and we could keep up with all the homework and extracurricular activities better, with one parent at home full-time.

I am very grateful that I have a job and career that can support my family on a one-parent income.  I know many women who work not because it’s a choice, but because their families would not survive without dual income.

Do I sometimes wish the stay-at-home parent was me?  Absolutely.

Do my children seem to mind that they have their dad instead of their mom as the stay-at-home parent?  Absolutely not.

As my son concluded in his essay, “My parents are of course just parents.”

Published indoctoring and motherhoodwork life balance