Traditional life has changed dramatically over time in regards to balancing work and family. The men do offer support to the family by work and women are mostly home care. Health increases for both when children enter school. Times have shown how work and family balance becomes challenges for both that results in divorce. Divorce is what happen to my family.
I decided to interview my mother who has worked since she was 18 years old. Being a job working at a motel cleaning rooms to volunteer work at a local hospital. She married my father a few months after turning 21. She already had given birth to my sister and was a single mother. Working was a challenge for her by finding childcare. She was able to have my grandparents who had retired
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Balancing a flexible work schedule for her to be home with us. Marriage influences showed more and more each day. My father became disabled and not able to work. He became the parent at home and my mother began to work more.
When I was eight years old, my parents divorced because my father thought she was having an affair at work. She was doing long hours at school and work. Balancing both family and work was my mother 's first priority. Making sure we had food to eat and a place to sleep each night.
We moved to live with my grandmother while she continued to attend school. After she graduated with a Bachelors of Science in Accounting, my mother started working with a nonprofit company doing bookkeeping. She also received the Who’s Who award from Women in Business.
My mother was a single mother now and learned to balance family, plus work. She has worked very hard to make sure we had food on the table each night. Even when my sister and I began teenagers who really caused trouble, she was always there for us. There have been challenges along the way
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I was a young mother which I feel no one is ready for. Being a single mother and working has been tough in many ways. I know how my mother felt all these years of working to support her family.
I have learned from speaking with her more in depth during my interview of how balancing work, marriage, and family is not as easy as it looks. I know that having a relationship with balance is the key. Work is left at the door when you leave and home is left at home.
The ways I will follow the examples of my mother is to take time out for yourself. This is how you can be healthy and to take care of yourself. I will be using the information from the course by balancing my family life with work. Everyone has always had to work.
In the book, I can really relate to the “Sandwich Generation” of being pulled between the needs of a child and an aging parent.(Johnson,Miller & Olsen, 2013). I have been taken care of my mother now for the last couple of years since my grandmother died. She was diagnosed with a heart disease and not able to do many
One of the reasons why divorce rates are high now, is because women are economically independent because they are educated. They did used to earn in the past, but now they have control over their income and they don’t put up with things like men abusing them or domestic violence; this shows that women have become stronger economically and emotionally as compared to how they were in the past. Those who criticize women for working and not spending time with their children, Coontz states that, “Kids do better when their mothers are happy with their lives.” (Coontze98). Men have changed as well; men didn’t used to think that children were their responsibility.
Over the centuries, these methods have changed. These methods are changed because of events in history. Such events like the Industrial Revolution, the Great Depression, WWII, and mass numbers of Immigrants are said to be the cause for the loss of the "traditional family. Coontz states, "The Industrial Revolution destroyed the traditional family." The Industrial Era provided work for younger ages. With the age of the work force lowered, children had less time to play; the roles for women were redefined, causing more individuality with in a family. This was not the style of the traditional family, when the wife cooks the meals, takes care of kids; the husband goes to work, and supports the family, traditionally.
being a manager of the family. Women had to learn how to finance on the job. Managing money
In Letha Scanzoni’s book Men, Women, and Change: A Sociology of Marriage and Family she observes that a wife’s duty was “to please her husband...to train the children so that they would reflect credit on her husband”(205). Alongside the wife’s duties Scanzoni provides the husband’s duty to “provide economic resources”(207).These expectations have long been changed, since then these have become common courtesies. Today, we see less and less of the providing father, homemaking wife and respectable children family structure. We are now seeing what sociologists call the senior-partner/junior-partner structure. Women and mothers are now opting for the choice to work and provide more economic resources for the family. This has changed those expected duties of both men and women in a family scene. A working mother more or less abandons the role of homemaker, to become a “breadwinning” mother, and the father stays his course with his work and provide for the family. Suzanne M. Bianchi in her book Changing Rhythms of American Family Life comments on the effect of mothers working and the time they spend in the home. “Mothers are working more and including their children in their leisure time” (Chapter 10), now that ...
It may seem impossible to juggle many things in life at one time; such as trying to get all the assignments completed, and studying done in a short amount of time to make it to work on time. If that was not stressful enough there is also the pressure of making sure to spend time with family. It can be extra stressful when someone has a very big and close family, and a variety of events are to be attended, making sure assignment are completed in order to join the family. Sometimes it may seem that there is simply not enough time in a day to balance school, work, and family which requires a lot of effort, this can seem like a very daunting task because no one ever wants to fail, it is difficult trying to please everyone, and there seems to
Growing up, my dad worked at a local aluminum plant and my mother was a stay at home parent. They both had very different parenting styles. I was the third child out of four, three girls, two boys (one that lived with us and the other we never saw). My father was more
The first eight years of my life, I lived only with my mother. It was not because my parents were divorced or my father left the family, but because I am a second born child. Due to the one-child policy, when my mother was pregnant with me, she had to quit her job and separate from
...child. I had no choice but to shape up and make a way for the both of us. Having a child made me realize that life is not all fun and games as my mother would say. I learned that in life there are responsibilities. I truly believe that had I not had a child at an early age, I would still be a wild absentminded party girl and who knows what else may have happened.
When Beverly's mother died, she was only 11 years old and it was terribly hard for her. She was the youngest of her brothers and sisters. They each had their own interests and activities, so she often found herself feeling lonely. Her childhood affect...
I was raised in a single-parent home, but I was around my grandparents who are married and have been since before I was born. My grandmother had her own job making good money as a sheriff’s officer and my grandfather was in the military. My grandmother followed the traditional role of a woman and she took care of the household doing things such as cleaning and cooking. Although my grandmother took on the traditional role of cleaning and cooking for the house, my grandfather was capable and willing to when she wasn’t able. Unlike
The term “Sandwich Generation” is what some are using to describe those people who, for one reason or another, are ‘sandwiched’ between the need to provide care not only for their own children but also for at least one aging parent. There has been much debate on what classifies someone as being included in such group, and little emphasis on the hardships that accompany the transition between child and caregiver. This paper will discuss the classification that make up the “sandwich generation’ and some of the financial and emotional stress that comes with this new responsibility.
Becoming a mother has been the best part of my life. I became a mother at a very young age. I had no idea what to expect and was not in the least prepared for the journey that lie ahead. I have truly embraced motherhood and enjoy all the wonderful things it has taught me. While living through motherhood, I have found that it can teach you the most valuable lessons there are to learn. Being a mother has taught me how to have patience. I have also learned that being a mother takes a lot on mental and physical strength. My children have been the best to teach me how to juggle many tasks at once. They have made me strong. Even through some unexpected turns, I have learned how to get through hard times and really learn what it means to never give up. My children are my biggest blessing, and I hope they will learn valuable lessons through me. The skills I have learned from being a mother have helped me in my college journey.
In 1996, my mother graduated from Eastern Kentucky University with a baccalaureate in Nursing. Although it took her five years, we are still proud of her and all that she has accomplished. Today my mom is still working as an RN. Although she just quit her job at Berea Hospital, where she had been for four years, she is beginning a new style of nursing.
I divorced my husband and began attending college full time. Working 2 jobs, raising 3 children and attending the nursing program full time was the hardest task I had ever done. It also gave me a great sense of achievement and self worth. After completing school and obtaining my nursing license, I realized that if I was able to withstand that period of time and succeed, I was strong enough to accomplish anything I chose to do and would never allow anything or anyone to stand in my way again.
Nonetheless, these situations entirely change nowadays. The equality between men and women in roles is very clear at the moment, thus women can work outside to earn money, while men share the household tasks such as cooking, cleaning, washing as well as caring for children. It can be clearly seen that women are independent from money, as they can earn money by themselves to support their living costs. Accordingly, the divorce rates have recently risen. Another reason to believe the recent increase in divorce rates is stress in modern living.