A New Survey Reveals the No. 1 Worry for SAHMs — & It's Time for a Paradigm Shift

Long before I became SheKnows’ Parenting Editor, I spent a decade as a stay-at-home mom to four kids ranging from elementary-age to infancy — and I don’t mind telling you that it was just as hard (and, on many days, harder) than my corporate position. At least when I’m at work these days, no one is asking me to help them wipe or having a meltdown because they want me to put their banana back in the peel. And I have set hours now when as a SAHM I was literally never off-duty; it often felt relentless, like just as I was done with one thing, here came another, even in the middle of the night.

That’s not even touching on the profound mental health toll it can take. Being a SAHM is a thankless job, even though you’re working — seven days a week! — as a chef, maid, chauffeur, teacher, caretaker, laundry service, personal shopper, nurse, and whatever else the day demands. And despite all that monumental effort, we still feel guilty and worry that we aren’t “pulling our weight” since we don’t bring in any income. I remember so well the pang of anxiety when someone would ask me what I did for a living; saying I was a SAHM made me feel judged, like everyone thought I was just chilling at home, lounging lazily on the couch in my sweats, living off my husband’s hard-earned wages like some sort of career freeloader. Or like I was somehow less important because I didn’t earn a salary.

This is because I, like the rest of America, seem to have internalized the wildly inaccurate stereotype that continues to plague and stigmatize SAHMs. Why society still so stubbornly clings to these ridiculous notions is hard to grasp — but one thing is abundantly clear: that needs to change, like yesterday.

“The root of this is a culture that not only doesn’t assign value to care but still needs to understand and take time to evaluate the reality of 24/7 caregiving,” Neha Ruch, speaker and founder of Mother Untitled, who has devoted her entire profession to changing the conversation about stay-at-home motherhood, tells SheKnows. “Without a cultural dialogue or appreciation of the day-to-day labor, and also the intellectual and emotional rigor of raising children today, women are deemed as ‘having it easy’ or like their work in the home isn’t ‘really work.’”

It’s this quest to shift the dialogue around SAHMs that recently facilitated a fascinating survey, conducted on behalf of Mother Untitled by the independent research firm Proof Insights. American Mothers on Pause (AMP) is a survey of over 2,000 women, including stay-at-home mothers, part-time working mothers, and women considering leaving their jobs to become stay-at-home mothers. All respondents had bachelor’s degrees, had children under 18, and were between the ages of 25 and 54.

The AMP survey offered some very insightful results as to what mothers gain — and lose — by making the choice to stay at home with their kids. Above all, it showed that over 50 percent of moms are “extremely or very likely to reduce their hours or downshift to a less taxing job in the next two years,” and that 1 in 3 working moms reported that they’re “somewhat, very, or extremely likely to leave their jobs for stay-at-home parenthood in the next two years.”

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