Let me count the ways working mothers are meant to feel grateful.
Landing a part-time job.
Landing any job after three, five, seven years out of the workforce.
Working four days a week when you’re paid for three, or five days a week when you are paid for four (it’s part-time, shut-up, there aren’t many jobs like that around).
Leaving one hour early on a Wednesday to go to a parent/teacher interview (but staying back at least an hour, maybe two, for the whole next working week to show you are serious about your job).
Being able to communicate with work all night and on your days off, particularly with colleagues who email at 10.34pm.
Being able to communicate with work all morning and on your days off, particularly with colleagues who email at 5.17am.
Part-time work has long been seen as the Holy Grail of the work/life balance. Yet studies show that part-time work for women only serves to make life busier (they take on more household duties as well as working). Added to that round-the-clock franticness, is that their work status, compared to their partners, becomes less equal. You’ve seen it before, the more “flexible” you are the more rigid a partner’s work becomes as they start moving on up the career ladder, earning more money, working longer hours and being able to contribute to the household less.