The decision to stay home with our children can be hard enough, but it's even harder when it seems there is no choice.
Kitty began her career in anthropology, but fell in love
with teaching while interviewing residents of rural Alaska for a National Parks
program. She taught elementary school for twelve years, but gave that up when
she met her husband, a Navy pilot, and they moved from her home state of Washington
to Florida.
There, she made plans to start a PhD program in public
policy with an emphasis on education and was excited to begin. Those
plans came to a halt when she
became pregnant with their son, their only child. Kitty found her role
as military spouse and mom made full-time work nearly impossible.
I interviewed Kitty four years ago when she was 40 years old
and her son was 15 months. Since then, she and her family have moved three
times, landing back in Florida again.
Kitty does not regret her decisions, but she plans to return to the workforce in a few
years when her husband retires.
This is Kitty’s story, in her own words:
I don’t know what I’m going to do.
When my son Evan gets older I am definitely going back to work. I cannot do
this for the rest of my life, although I don’t really feel the drive to go back
to the classroom.
I was doing a lot – up in
Washington – of consulting work. I was on a state committee that was looking at
fairness and bias, and I loved that. I really felt like before I got married I
was heading in this direction where I was eventually going to be able to leave
the classroom and sustain myself through the consulting work.
But that kind of came to an abrupt
halt when I got married and moved down here. I don’t have those contacts and
I’ve been out of the scene up there for two and a half, almost three years now.
We’ll see what happens when we go back.
We’re going to be back in
Washington again and I certainly can get back in contact with people, but my
husband is going to be gone for months at a time on the air craft carrier and I
don’t want to get myself into a situation where I’m in the classroom, working
Monday through Friday. I mean I would have my parents around to help me, but
you know, they’re elderly and they’re not up for babysitting every day.
I firmly believe that doors will
open and that it’s right for me to stay home with Evan right now, but not
forever. I wasn’t satisfied with teaching, and I knew that (graduate) school was
one of those things where it would be lot of time commitment to do it right. I
didn’t know if I was ready to jump into that.
Also, I knew we had a finite amount
of time here in Florida, and that we were going to be moving eventually. If I
didn’t hit it hard in those two years, I wasn’t going to get my coursework
done.
In retrospect, that was really a very
good decision. I wound up with postpartum depression and it was all that I
could do to keep my head above the water. I’m glad I didn’t have the pressure
of school or work on top of that.
Another reason I wanted to stay
home was I always knew that if I had kids… I had spent twelve years in the
classroom and I could pick out which of my students had been day care and which
ones had been home with mom. The kids that had been home with mom or with a
caregiver, like an aunt or a sister or a grandparent – somebody who is family
and loves them and who wasn’t paid to take care of them – you know. There’s a
difference.
Those kids were not as needy of my
time and seemed to be a little more adjusted to who they were as people. The
day care kids were adjusted as far as teams and following directions, but they
just didn’t seem to know themselves as well. It would be hard for any nine-year-old
to know themselves, but there was just a different confidence level that I saw
in the kids.
I’m not knocking parents who had to
put their kids through day care. I know that for most families it’s a financial
decision to keep working put their kids in day care. I certainly have a lot of
friends who are not in any position for the mom to quit their jobs.
The other reason, too, is that
maybe there really is a subculture (in the Navy) – and here’s the
anthropologist in me coming out -- with its own customs and rules for
belonging, and the vast majority – and I am not kidding when I say the vast
majority – of women who have children stay at home.
One reason is because it’s very
stable. I am talking officers’ wives here. It is a little different with
enlisted. They don’t make as much money. My husband is not, for the amount of
education and training he’s had, is not compensated very well. But we’ve lived
comfortably, and part of it is through our benefits like the Commissary and the
free medical. Right there, we’ll save hundreds of dollars. But there really is a
support system amongst the wives. But, it’s kind of the expectation that you’re
going to stay home and I just kind of slid right into that.
I miss intellectual stimulation. I
miss the validation. I miss feeling like I’m in control and competent. I miss
the satisfaction of a job well done. I miss the “thank you” and just the
reassurance that, you know… I guess I had a lot of my self-worth tied up in
working.
While I know in the long run what
I’m doing by staying home with my son is going to be best for him, he’s like
this little fifteen- month old. Now he gives hugs and kisses and stuff, but
when he was little, it was just pooping and screaming and eating, and there weren’t
a lot of reward in that. You know. Outside rewards.
It’s getting easier partly because
I think I have adjusted, but little things where he comes up and gives me a big
mouth kiss on the cheek or a hug, those are his little ways of letting my know
that I’m the most important person to him.
That melts my heart.
But one thing I did take on is I
became president of my Spouse’s Club. As I told one of my friends back home,
“I’ve become that which I used to mock” because I’d look at the Navy wives –
remember I taught in a Navy community – and they were all these moms who were
just hanging out at school chit-chatting and gossiping with each other. I would
always be thinking in my head, “Get a life.” Then they would move down in a pack
to get coffee, talking about squadron stuff, and their whole conversation was
“Oh, the squadron this. The squadron that.” I would just think, “Oh, they don’t
have a life outside their husbands’ identities.”
And I’ve become that.
I mean, the first thing you do when
you meet someone else in the military community is, “Oh, my husband. He’s a
lieutenant. He’s a pilot over in whatever unit.” At what point did I become
that versus, “Hi. My name is Kitty. I teach fourth grade?”
It was actually really hard and a
real source of contention between my husband and me. Because I was like, “You
don’t understand. I gave up my job. I owned a house in Washington. I sold that
to move down here. I gave up my name. Now I’ve given up my job, and where am I?
Who is Kitty? I am identified through Trent’s wife and Evan’s mom, and I don’t
have anything that identifies me as “I am this. I am a teacher. I am a
consultant. I am a committee member for fairness and bias.”
I have lost those identities to the
past and I don’t like the fact that all the hats I wear now are not mine. And
he was just like, “Oh, well. What’s wrong with being my wife? What’s wrong with
being Evan’s mom?” And I’m like, “There’s nothing wrong with that.”
I’ve come to realize that I’ll get
my hats back.
If I could do it again, I would
still decide to stay home and that goes back to the classroom. When my son is nine,
I know he’s going to be better off because of the fact that I stayed home.
It has meant a lot of changes for
us financially. We don’t eat out anymore. That’s an easy thing to wipe off your
budget. The household is given $1000 every two weeks from which groceries and
gas and incidentals, clothes for Evan or something for myself come from. Before,
if I wanted something I would buy it. I think the big one is the eating out. We
go out only for special occasions now whereas before we went out two or three times
a week. And we don’t really buy prepackaged stuff anymore.
I don’t regret my decision. I know
I will not be a stay-at-home-mom forever. I’ve just taken my hats off and hung
them on the hat rack for a little bit. I’ll dust those hats off and they’ll be
back. As you get older, you get more and more hats. I wear two very important
hats now as a wife and a mom, but that does not mean I have to throw away those
others.
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