I'm NOT just a homemaker
I saw some life
insurance policy paperwork lying out on the counter the other day that caught
my eye. Looking at it made me a little ticked. It wasn't the sad realization
that my husband is readying things for our financial future when something
happens to him that made me so upset. Nope, it was one little word on the
bottom of a questionnaire that sent me into a shit fit.
The form offered a short
line in which to write "spouse's occupation," and my husband wrote:
HOMEMAKER.
Ok, aside from the fact
that it's not 1955, and I'm sure that word doesn't even exist anymore... I'm
aggravated, hurt and offended that this is the one word my husband chose to
describe what I do every day of my life. No, I'm not saying my husband is a chauvinistic
brute. He knows better - his mother and sisters are nurses, his youngest sister
is a teacher. His grandmother inherited and ran a successful grocery store
chain after her husband died. So I feel it necessary to explain to my
husband why this description of me just isn't going to cut it.
You see, I worked really
hard to get my degree from a prestigious women's college 20 years ago. A
college that for more than 170 years has been trying to break down and shatter
stereotypes that women are just here to cook and have babies - to
"homemake." It is a highly-decorated and esteemed higher learning
institution where women have come to learn the same things that men are
learning, to play the same sports as the men are playing, to be the best at whatever
they dream. I'll admit I was never great at math or science (I may have bribed
a biology lab partner to do all the pig dissecting sophomore year), but I could
read and write like hell and it's the only thing that put a diploma in my hand
and I'm damn proud of it.
Featured in a text book. I've come a long way from graffitiing the principal's car in 1986. |
I work part time at my
daughter's preschool now, as a one-woman media/publicity department. I write press
releases and stories for publication, take pictures, update their web site,
create and send out direct media. But more importantly, I'm Miss Andrea to 50 preschoolers who trust me, who give me
hugs, who tell me stories each day about butterflies they caught, where they
saw a fox or how they lost a tooth. They trust and come to me when they are
crying on the playground, want to tell a secret or have an accident on the
floor.
For the past couple
years, I've volunteered at the grade school cafeteria. This is not a pretty job
people, as I'm sure some of you may already know. It's like helping hungry,
angry, little people in a ketchup splattered, Jell-O stained, stale
bread-smelling, windowless room for two hours a day. And none of them ever say
"please." But I go anyway because I love my kids. I love the smile on
their faces when they get to see mom standing there with gloves and an apron on
cleaning spilled peaches from their lunch table.
Yes, I am home most days
with four kids. I'm dealing with a lot of laundry, a lot of missed pee in
toilets, a lot of fights over Barbie dolls and a few piles of dog poop the new
puppy might leave for me. I'm trying not to piss myself jumping on the trampoline
with the twins. I'm singing Ariana Grande songs out loud in the car with a
5-year-old who doesn't care that I have the suckiest voice ever. I'm failing at
way too many Pinterest recipes that my kids won't eat and constantly wiping
fingerprints from every glass surface in this house. I'm coordinating play
dates for my kids at the park when all I really want to do is watch Grey's
Anatomy on Netflix with a glass of wine. I'm taxiing the kids to and from
practices and games and friends' houses like I'm some 1980s Tony Danza.
But here's the thing...
yes, all that "homemaking" takes a lot of my time, but in no way does
it define me. Don't get me wrong, I love being able to see my kids more than I
would if I had a full-time job. I love that I'm able to drop everything to come
and get them when I get that barf call from the school secretary. I love that
they can come home from school and ask me for homework help instead of some
babysitter (love is probably too strong a word here). But I'm letting you know, I'm not the homemaking
robot you think I am. I'm more than just Mom-Cleaner. I'm more than just
Wife-Cleaner. I'm more than just Dog-Cleaner. I'm more than just House-Cleaner.
I have beautiful,
creative - sometimes twisted - thoughts that I love to write down. I have
dreams and aspirations of doing something great for the literary world (says
the lady who for one hour stood in the Target toy aisle contemplating the
purchase of a fart gun). I want to teach my kids a love for reading and writing
and the art of communicating honestly and completely uninhibited - without
reservation. I am a storyteller. I am a friend who will listen (and probably
give a painfully honest opinion, too). I am a lover to four messy, stinky
people. I am a believer in a God who somehow has got to have a purpose for
me. I am a juggler of life. I am all this and more.
I ask you, dear husband,
can you fit all that on one line of your questionnaire?
This post originally ran here at PopsugarMoms on Sept. 21, 2017. Link below:
https://www.popsugar.com/moms/Why-Homemaker-Bad-Word-44051265?utm_medium=facebook&utm_source=post&utm_campaign=moms
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