Are you a stay-at-home-mum? Is it something you tell people with pride?
Do you burst with joy when telling old friends explaining you are busy and fulfilled, that your days are spent in a tapestry of ways, crafting little people?
Or do you cringe a little at the term?
It’s a phrase that has both divided and united women. It’s one battleground of the so-called “Mummy Wars” of the last decade (oh please let them be over).
But it’s a term that hasn’t been embraced by women due to its perceived connotations.
I’ve noticed since I became a mum a re-occurring conversation women seem to have around the same phases of their child’s life.
It first crops up when their baby turns one. It then lingers and dies down a little for a few years and then it resurfaces with a vengeance when their child starts school. By the time all their kids are at school it seems to be an ongoing conversation.
By then though I have noticed its less of a conversation and more of a justification, an answer to an often unasked question that many women feel they need to square off with each person they meet.
Why aren’t you back at work yet?
I’ve noticed it with many of my friends who are stay-at-home mums this constant need to justify why they are at home. And they tell me that its something often asked.