A luxury.
It doesn’t really bother me.
I’ve heard it countless times.
And, frankly, I feel quite blessed and lucky to be home with my children during these years.
In my book luxury involves messages, wine, smooth jazz, and chocolate.
Lots of chocolate.
On the whole, my normal day with the kids at home involves none of these things–if you exclude the chocolate I inhale in secret during nap-time.
And seriously, whose definition of luxury includes an endless line of dirty diapers, piles of laundry, wild tantrums, picky eaters, and floors that never stay clean?
Before I was at home with the kids even I used to wonder, “what do those moms do all day long?“
After I had my first baby and was navigating the treacherous waters of sleep deprivation and postpartum depression, a friend of mine who was still single causally asked,
“Seriously Nancy, what do you do all day? If I was just home with a baby and didn’t have to work I think I’d just sit around and eat Bon Bons all day!”
She’s lucky she got out of my house alive.
Then, the other day while doing the dishes, I had a revelation.
You see, I insist on doing the dishes every night.
Insist!
And, it’s not because I’m a clean-freak (ha!) or my husband does a lousy job cleaning the kitchen.
I insist on doing the dishes.
Because while I do the dishes my husband gets the kids in and out of the bath and into their pajamas.
They have a mini dance party and wrestle and do all the wild things I’m no good at.
In other words, my husband manages the circus while I get to take a break. And do the dishes in the quiet kitchen.
It just might be my favorite time of the day.
I was doing the dishes one night and listening to the sounds from the upstairs bathroom.
My husband was singing, “I knew an old lady that swallowed a fly” and I could hear all 3 kids giggle and sing with him when he tickled their tummies during the spider-verse.
There were a few splashing and hitting issues that my husband handled well, just as we had agreed we would handle things like that.
By the time I was finished with the dishes, I knew the kids would be clean and happy and ready for bed…
Or if not quite ready for bed at least happy.
I trusted completely that the kids were safe and happy.
While I cleaned up the kitchen because they were with my husband.
And then it hit me–this must be what it’s like for my husband at work.
He is free to do his work knowing that his kids are being cared for by a parent that he trusts and loves.
He leaves trusting that I will take care of it.
That I will do things as we’ve agreed is best.
That while he is gone they will be getting cared for by someone that loves them as much as he does.
And that, my friends, is why being a stay-at-home-mother really is a luxury.
And that all of the precious moments are being seen by one of us, and gathered into the collective memory of the family.
It is a luxury for my husband to wake up each morning confident he can leave his children with the best possible caregiver–their mother.
I wiped down the messy table and counters in our kitchen.
Picked up all the bits of food the baby had pitched to the ground and began to scrub the pots.
My husband was getting the kids out of the tub.
And the two older ones were running through the upstairs hall naked and screaming with joy.
That he gets to support his family without a shadow of worry about who is caring for his children.
And I get to do the dishes with the same confidence.
So, I get it.
My life really is a luxury, as is my husband’s.
Even if there is oatmeal smeared on my walls, poop stains on my son’s clothes, and dirt under my fingernails.
It’s not what I thought luxury would look like. But nothing ever is.
Even as a man (but still a stay at home parent) I can soooooo relate to this!!! As a nurse, my wife works 12+ hour shifts. So on days she works, bathtime is still all me. BUT on days that she doesn’t work, I INSIST on doing the dishes. I was practically cheering you on as I read that.
Great article! I’m sending it to other stay at home parents. 😊
Hi!
I love this post. I never really thought of being a stay at home mom as a luxury but I was always, like you, grateful for the opportunity to do so. I thanked my Heavenly Father every. single. night. when I said my prayers that I was the one home with my children. So many people would ask me what I did but so many more would say “how can you afford to do that?” Well, I never could come up with the answers quick enough when I was younger. But looking back, I never felt like we did without a single thing. My husband was a wonderful provider. But we also didn’t do so many things families did when both parents work. We didn’t eat out all the time, we didn’t put our children in the tub 30 minutes after picking them up from daycare and then off to bed, we didn’t dread the weekends because we couldn’t get away from them. So yes, we did without some things. The blessings we enjoyed by “doing without” were so much sweeter.
thank you for sharing this, Debbie. And, you are so right. That is a much more common question–how do you afford it, and so much harder to answer. It sounds like you and your husband built a beautiful life for your family–one I’m sure your kids are still benefiting from. Blessings!