Monday, October 5, 2009

Happy birthday, Momma!

Mom turns 55 years young today! And it's world teacher appreciation day! How appropriate! How did we never know about this before? Maybe it's a sign, mom. Maybe it'll make you more excited about your job!....? Well I guess that's it for this...don't know what else to say...but I think you look very nice in this photo...

I will write more tomorrow about other exciting happenings of the day (and take some photos of where we live, Maryanne), but today is about mom!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Inane studies

And no, I'm not talking about getting a degree and then not being able to find a job...although that can definitely feel applicable at times

Ever wonder why some studies are even conducted? "Eating fast food positively linked to obesity!" No kidding! The latest, reported by the NYT, "At-home Moms Rate Themselves Higher Than Working Moms, Survey Finds". The 'rating' they're talking about is rating themselves on how good of a mother they are. I don't have kids, so maybe I don't know what I'm talking about, but isn't it obvious that you're going to feel that you're being a better mother if you see your kids for more than 2 hours a day? I realize a lot of people probably feel this peaks after you spend a certain number of hours with your kids - i.e. after that, the more time you spend with your kids, the worse of a mother you become (haha). But seeing as only 13% of mothers think that them working full time is what's best for their kids (a breakthrough!), it seems there's somewhat of a concensus on the issue.

Another breakthrough: stay-at-home mothers tend to be younger than mothers who work. No kidding! Maybe that's because they stay at home when their kids are young (and they are young) and go back to work when their kids are a bit older (and they are a bit older).
Anyway, despite the inanity of the study, it's nice to see an article which (in my opinion) sheds at least somewhat of a positive light on staying at home with your kids (if you ignore the stay-at-home-moms-are-less-educated-than-moms-who-work bit, which I'm sure a lot of feminists take as if-you're-educated-you-would-never-waste-your-life-staying-at-home, although I think the real reason is that the type of job you'd have if you, say, had a university degree is much more flexible and understanding that the kind of job you might have if you're, say, a high school drop-out - not that the two are mutually exclusive!).
What breakthrough study do you have for us next, NYT?