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Women's Fiction
When Mothers Work: Loving Our Children Without Sacrificing Our Selves

When Mothers Work: Loving Our Children Without Sacrificing Our Selves

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rejecting the martyrdom excuse
Review: As a woman contemplating beginning a family, I've been concerned with the issue of how I will balance my desire to be a good parent while also still having a life. I wasn't looking for validation of a career choice so much as guidance for thinking about the issue on my own. To that end, I found this book to be extremely useful and stimulating for thought--Joan Peters shed light on attitudes and assumptions I have had without every questioning or examining their sources. I came to realize that many of them are not consistent with my values, and reading the book was the first step in changing them. I appreciate the book's sensitivity to the many concerns women have regarding motherhood and career, and the fact that it isn't just saying "buck up and put your kid in childcare, you have a right." That would not have served me. Instead, it focuses much more on gender issues and how we can adapt parenting to better include both the mother and father for the everyone's benefit. It also brings to light the way that some women use having children as a way to avoid identity conflicts of their own. She asks some tough questions with regard to this, which I think will help some women get to the heart of their real motives for motherhood. If you simultaneously feel that you weren't put on the earth solely to reproduce but also care deeply about doing right by your children, this book will assist you in striking a balance that will work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reassuring...
Review: I'm contemplating having a child but know that I can not give up a career that I love which helps define who I am. I've been looking for literature to try to understand how to have it all. The beauty of this book is that it is so obvious once you read it - there is nothing magical about a mother that can't be provided by a father. Split the work 50-50. read how successful families do it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reassuring...
Review: I'm contemplating having a child but know that I can not give up a career that I love which helps define who I am. I've been looking for literature to try to understand how to have it all. The beauty of this book is that it is so obvious once you read it - there is nothing magical about a mother that can't be provided by a father. Split the work 50-50. read how successful families do it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great reinforcer for Mom's who wonder if it's ok to work!
Review: No mother returns to work without some feeling of ambivalence. This book does a solid job of dispelling the myths of the benefits of the always available mother which society seems to call for and gives so many reasons why Mother's work outside the home is good for the whole family. I have read it over and over and find new jewels of wisdom each time. Ms. Peters speaks of the value of work with confidence and conviction while never losing her tenderness when voicing so beautifully the absolute joy which children bring to our lives.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Buy or borrow this book..then pass it to another mother!
Review: The first two years of my daughter's life, I was thoroughly conflicted. Was she going to end up "damaged" because I worked? Was I a bad mother because I wanted to work? When I read this book, it was like an enormous weight had been lifted off my shoulders! I am now buying this book for my sister who has the "guilt" also. I began to see what a positive roll model I was for my daughter - and now my newborn son. In fact,I am going back to work tomorrow. I am a little anxious - but no longer because of my guilt, just my added responsibility!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Relieves working mothers' guilt by bashing SAHMs
Review: This book helped me to understand that rearing children full time is pointless miserable job. Why waste my time rearing children when I can pay an illiterate Ecuadorian to do it for me? I learned that children do not respect parents who stay home and teach them values and life-lessons. They are super proud of parents to pull long hours and never see them. Imagine the pride in their little faces when they find out daddy got a promotion and gets to buy that new Lexus! No more guilt for me! Remember, it's quality time, not quantity! Now if I could only convince my wife to have the same attitude about quality time over quantity....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What an eye opener!
Review: This book is about raising healthy children. This is not meant to be a political or controversial book. It deals with the real issues all parents face when confronted with wanting to raise your children and having to support your family. The author's theory is that fulfilled parents raise independant, self-reliant children. There are examples of families that use many different strategies to raise their children successfully, without guilt for the time they spend at work. The author talks about the satisfaction that BOTH parents get from caregiving. Unlike the family dynamic of the 1950's, if the mother is sufficiently supported in child rearing by the father, she can parent effectively herself without becoming burnt out. In addition, the children benefit from having 2 involved parents, rather than just 1 or 1 1/2, and the father gains from having a closer relationship with the children. At the same time the parents have the satisfaction of working and supporting their family together (or however it works best for that family). This book helped me quite a bit. I don't know how I will feel after my child is born and my maternity leave is over. My husband has always promised we would share all work in raising our family but I just couldn't give up the power of running the house. I didn't believe he could do the job as well as I would. This book explains that dads don't do things the same way as moms. They do them differently, and the kids benefit from both parenting styles. This book gave me the courage to trust him to do his very best, just as I know I will.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rejecting the martyrdom excuse
Review: This book made me feel better about my decision to work. Not just because it says it's ok but the reasons why and the shared experiences of others. I didn't give it five stars because many of the people interviewed are not your average working mom. They are often more privileged with the ability to tailor their working schedules to suit their desires. However, there are many interesting points of view that made great sense. Definitely buy this book if you are planning to or considering being a working mom. Very few books pat the backs of those who decide to work and it was refreshing to hear someone list the values to working and not condemning those who decide to stay at home.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Common-sense thinking about juggling parenthood and life
Review: While this book was written for a primarily American audience, it still made alot of good sense for me as a New Zealand mother-to-be. What she proposes is really very simple - moving away from the overparenting trap, including our children as part of our lives as women rather than our whole reason for being, allowing the parenting to extend beyond just the nuclear family and most importantly of all, elevating the role of the father as parent. Made sense to me.


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