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Full time mum? |
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#26 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 10,196
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It's just a transparent attempt to curry favour from the hard of thinking. Sure, we all love and respect our mothers (well, most of us do) so I guess the assumption is supposed to be that anyone who's a mum deserves love and respect.
*People who adopt or foster children are in a different league altogether. |
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#27 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: By the sea, plagued with gulls
Posts: 16,928
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I used to be a "SAHM" ( Stay at home Mum ) , full time. I cooked, cleaned, helped with home work etc etc, as we all did and do.
Now my kids are older ( Youngest 2 are 17 & 19 ) & I work @ 35 hours a week normally up to 11 pm at night. I am still a full time Mum, ensuring dinner is there even if I am at work, working to pay for things like driving lessons, buying a car for Uni, driving my girls to work ( & yes they do earn their way, no free lunches in my house hold). Waiting up on occassion on "Drunk Duty" till 03:30 am just in case I am needed ( Not needed yet) so I see it as the job description for a full time Mum does alter as the child gets older. To be honest, when they were younger, all I had to do was wash clean & feed them & put them to bed, the rest of the time was mine. Now, they do all that them selves & I spend more timne waiting up & worrying...... Ho Hum
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#28 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 13,987
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Someone should tell Little Miss Shred, Shred, Shred that tears are a part of crying.
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