Parenting, like most really important things in life, is both good and bad, both joyful and depressing.
Former Labor Opposition Leader turned Fairfax columnist, Mark Latham loves being a stay-at-home parent, and good for him.
Mind you, as he told us in one of his controversial columns in the AFR on the subject, his life is not entirely domestic. Here he compares his day with that of journalist and mother of two Lisa Pryor.
“I’m sure I’m just as busy as her: looking after a huge native garden at home, cooking gourmet meals for my family, pursuing a few business interests, writing books and The Australian Financial Review columns and, most crucially, preserving time for my children’s homework, conversation and love.”
If that is his experience of being a stay-at-home dad, I’m not surprised he loves it.
Apart from cooking those ‘gourmet meals’ (I have problems boiling an egg) that sounds pretty close to the perfect balance between interesting, fulfilling paid work and caring for home and kids. I take my hat off to him for organising his life so well.
For most of us, however, life both at home and at work is not quite so easy to wrangle into the shape we’d like. Not many of us become stay-at-home parents after being an MP and Leader of the Opposition. Not even those (according to Latham) amazingly content women of Sydney’s Western suburbs.
I doubt many of them are leaping up from penning their next book to cheerfully change a nappy or put a bandaid on a scraped knee, or taking a break from crafting a perfect sentence to add just the right amount of saffron to that gourmet meal.