In the News
Sep. 27th, 2009 11:47 pmA woman has been arrested after her baby was rescued from a smoke-filled house.
There were three children alone in the house, aged about 1, about 2, and about 3 (the one-year-old is the "baby" of the headline). Clearly she was wrong to leave them alone in the house.
But oh, by all the gods, I can think of so many ways to talk myself into thinking it might be ok. One year, two years, and three years. Gods.
I wonder have they any other parent, and will that other parent also be charged.
There were three children alone in the house, aged about 1, about 2, and about 3 (the one-year-old is the "baby" of the headline). Clearly she was wrong to leave them alone in the house.
But oh, by all the gods, I can think of so many ways to talk myself into thinking it might be ok. One year, two years, and three years. Gods.
I wonder have they any other parent, and will that other parent also be charged.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 09:14 am (UTC)By definition, yes.
-- "and will that other parent also be charged."
Ha!
Just, Ha!
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 10:22 am (UTC)Of course if Parent A expected Parent B to be home, but Parent B was for some reason not home and Parent A needed to leave, well then Parent B would have rather more to answer for.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 10:33 am (UTC)There are *lots* of reasons women are usually the ones getting charged with child neglect while men don't. Part of that is that men can and do opt out much earlier on, knowing women will pick up the slack.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 10:48 am (UTC)I guess my social circle contains few parents, and two families where the father does all or most of the parenting; which is probably a rather larger proportion of men-as-main-parent families than is actually the case in the wider world; maybe I'm over-optimistically thinking that in any case where the mother does most/all of the parenting that that was her active choice.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 12:27 pm (UTC)Aha ahahaha.
Now, I think
1. He wakes up slower than I do, and goes back to sleep easily, so at weekends I generally leap out of bed to supervise the roaming child and unless I go back and nag, I don't have any help until Tony joins the land of the awake people. I don't like nagging, so I save it for when I really need him to wake up and help. I can't play defect in the way I could when it was just two of us, because Charles will suffer if I do.
2. He can work late because I don't charge him for childcare if he's late home; I can't work late because the childminder will charge us for childcare if I am late to collect Charles.
This is not me having a go at Tony, but these are two ways in which it's really easy for us to slip into an unequitable division of labour, and we both have to actively tackle it by making sure Tony pulls his weight at other times and in other ways, and by keeping up the communication without resentment and strife creeping in. We're successful more often than we're not, but it's a constant thing.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 01:03 pm (UTC)I like to think that if I had kids (hahahahaha no) I wouldn't fall for that pressure; I have a strong desire to not get out of bed early, or go to work early (in such a way as to end up with child-picking-up-duty by staggering working hours for instance)... However somehow I have absorbed the idea that unwillingness to cope with a lot of early mornings is a Reason Not To Have Children rather than, say, a reason to find a partner who likes early mornings with whom to have children. I certainly grew up with the notion that Mummies do All The Parenting, stupid social expectations (get them out of my head).
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 01:38 pm (UTC)The seeing childcare as coming out of the 'second' salary problem comes out of viewing household finances as only made up of 2 full-time salaries, and of course as viewing the money as the only measure, rather than the happiness. Plenty of people would take a reduction in salary over being happy (e.g. Parent High-Earner works a 4-day week and Parent Low-Earner works a 2-3 day week and childcare is covered out of the joint account and everybody is a bit poorer and a lot happier).
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 01:51 pm (UTC)I think I'm probably just lucky that I plain old don't like babies and am not facing making my way through all of this.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 01:38 pm (UTC)I really admire the way you run your life and I consider you a positive role model. However, I'd like to call you on this. There must be ways in which you can make Tony sleeping in his problem and not yours if you both really wanted to. Could you get Charles when he wakes up and deposit him in bed with Tony and decamp to a spare bed/the sofa to sleep some more?
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 01:59 pm (UTC)I've been working hard over the last year to make sure I call Tony on his lie-ins when they bug me, and also prioritising my own rest more highly. We are both happiest on the days when he gets up at a reasonable time without me having had to ask, and that's the goal I'm working towards, having that kind of day every Saturday/Sunday.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 10:27 pm (UTC)I imagine we'd have these sorts of sleep issues if we had kids because it takes a lot of noise to wake J.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 02:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 02:41 pm (UTC)What we do know is that the reporters have failed to report adequately on this aspect (where is the father and what is to be done about him not having been there); which is useless of them (unfortunately not actually shocking).
(no subject)
Date: 2009-09-28 09:49 pm (UTC)