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Tiffany Thornton's avatar

Thank you for this piece! You have put into words what I have been thinking about for a while, especially as I take a huge step back from Instagram - all these accounts like Dr. Becky Kennedy (who I used to follow, by the way, and bought her book, though I never read it) offer a “solution” to a lack of a village. Monetizing parenting. But isn’t that our whole culture these days? Nothing is worth doing if you can’t monetize it? (Including parenting, apparently). Your #2 footnote is such a good point! I feel like I should read the article now…

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Lara Dulin Perez's avatar

Thank you for your writing! This is my first time reading Nuclear Meltdown. I'll be following you closely and looking back at your archive.

My husband and I have finally settled into stable careers and sat down to start talking about what it would look like to have kids. We both grew up with a "stay-at-home" parent and have agreed that it would be nice for me to spend a few years doing that. Plus, it'll save money on childcare.

The thing is - we can't. Housing in our mid-size midwest city has just become too expensive. Together we make 6 figures, but neither one of us is a particularly high earner. We each for local institutions - what we thought we respectable middle-class jobs when we chose them. Even if one of us steps back to go part-time, that's still not enough to cover a 2-bedroom home or apartment plus part-time childcare. So we're forced to both work full time and fork over $1600 a month for childcare. If we want two kids close in age, then one of us will have to seek a higher-paying job because we can't afford two kids in childcare at our current level of earning.

Realizing this has been incredibly angering, and I'm brought to many of the realizations that your Substack seems to be about. It's so obviously heinous to me that I'm "forced" to spend exorbitant amounts on childcare and I don't have the freedom to just raise my kids myself. We need to be doing something different. I don't want this individualistic, constantly striving society to be what I pass down to my kids. It might be too late for me in some sense - the ship of being a stay-at-home parent might have sailed. But we can name it and recognize that it's messed up and color outside the lines where we have the chance.

The push for free/cheap childcare is frustrating, too, because it just reinforces this professionalization of raising kids. Whatever money is offered to the daycare center if I send my child there should also be offered to me if I choose to raise them at home.

Anyway, thanks for letting me soapbox in your comments for a little while. Thank you for your sustained writing on this topic.

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