Life as a Stay-At-Home-Mum

It’s been almost 14 months now since I became a stay-at-home-mum (sahm). Do I enjoy being a sahm? Well, to the surprise of many, I’d say yes, I have been enjoying my stint as a sahm, but I’d like to highlight the plight of sahms here.

Actually, sahms are a very misunderstood lot of people. In the eyes of working people, a sahm is a very ‘free’ person, someone who stays at home and only looks after the child(ren) and the family. Now, can someone point out what the problem is here? Well, why should the job of a sahm be considered easy or even easier than that of the working person? Anyone who has taken care of a baby alone for awhile would know that looking after a baby or a child is hard work, let alone having to handle household chores at the same time. It is extremely annoying to get my ex-colleagues asking me or telling me that I’m leading an idle life as a ‘tai-tai‘ now. Which part of “no-pay childcare leave” do they not understand? I’m a full-time mother, not an idle woman who gets to while the time away.

I’m not resenting my choice (yes, it’s my choice, but also a decision made by both my hubby and I) to be a sahm. I’m just irritated by how people make ignorant comments about sahms and how the ‘job’ of sahms goes unrecognised by the general population just because it isn’t considered a real profession. The monotony of the routine of taking care of a baby is enough to kill some women and push them back to the workforce. Is that not true for some? Friends of mine who are mothers themselves wonder how I can choose to continue to be a sahm because they cannot and/or do not want to put up with the stress of being a sahm. Yes, you are reading right. The stress of being a sahm. Again, people who are unaware of what it takes to take care of a child would think that sahms have no stress at all. If you’re wondering at this point, what stress can a sahm have? Well, I’m sure many sahms would be able to share how difficult it is to handle a whiny, crying, clingy baby/child (can you just imagine how a persistent crying baby will drive you up the wall?), how to get food into the picky eater’s mouth (and make sure the food doesn’t get spat out), how there’s always housework that needs to be finished or how personal time is hard to come by…

Oh well, after having highlighted some negative points of being a sahm, I’d like to share how pleasurable it still is to be one at the end of the day.

I get to see my little one every moment, I’m aware of her every little new development and preference, I’m always there to ‘catch’ her doing something new and fascinating and best of all, I’m always there to shower her with hugs and tender loving care and be the recipient of loving hugs and kisses.

So are my degree and scholarship ‘wasted’? Well, I would say no, because to me, nothing is more important than being able to watch my little one grow and be there for her now. I can go back to work in future, but I can never turn back the clock to watch her grow up again.

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Woes of feeding a fussy eater

If you’ve been following the feeding section of my blog, you’d know by now that I have an extremely picky eater. Sometimes, I really wish that she were not so fussy then I’d have an easier time (and I can spend more time playing with her instead of feeding her). Very often, I get people telling me that I shouldn’t give such ‘fanciful’ food to Alicia and just feed her fish and spinach porridge for her meals as everybody else does. I get really pissed by comments like these because people just don’t understand (and they don’t even bother to try to) that I’m feeding a fussy baby and fish and spinach porridge for every meal and every day just doesn’t work out at all. And the most irritating thing is that because Alicia’s on the smaller side (her weight’s been hovering between the 10th-25th percentile since she became mobile), people just think that it must be because of what I’m feeding Alicia: if only I’d listen to them and feed porridge day in and day out instead of fanciful ‘rubbish’, Alicia would surely grow. I’d just say ‘thank you very much for your input, but really, if you know what my daughter is like, you’d know that it isn’t as easy as it looks’. Then there are those who say that it’s because I’ve introduced ‘fanciful’ food to Alicia, she’s rejecting simple porridge. Honestly, if Alicia were agreeable to eating simple porridge for every meal, I’d most certainly have given her that. Need I spend so much time every day, racking my brains and planning her meals if things were that simple? It’s because she refuses the simple food which other babies have no problems with that I have to come up with so many ideas of what to feed her. These people just can’t get things right.

My daughter’s not only fussy about food, she’s extremely active. How can she possibly put on much weight? But of course, people don’t understand. They just think that I’m a bad mummy. And there’s the breast milk issue. If it’s not the food that I’m feeding that’s not causing her to grow, it must be the milk I’m providing. Breastfeeding beyond the first year and even after the first 6 months seems undesirable to most people. When am I ever gonna stop breastfeeding, people would ask in a most irritating manner. Well, my response is always a flat ‘as long as Alicia wants to’. If you’ve read my musings in the breastfeeding section, you’d understand why I really love breastfeeding and why being able to breastfeed is so precious to me. I really don’t want to switch or even supplement with formula when I’ve got no issues with milk supply.

It seems that once I have my baby, everyone has something to say about the way I treat my baby and somehow what I’m doing is always ‘wrong’ or ‘just not desirable’. I’m sure every new mummy (and daddy) knows just how irritating that can be. Maybe next time when someone tells me to feed simple porridge to Alicia instead of the food she eats, I’d tell her to try feeding Alicia herself…

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