March 16, 2009


  • Every cloud has a silver lining.
    ..
    Welcome home to your babies.
    Any comments???
    Jocelyn Noveck - Associated Press Writer 

    Associated Press smallNEW YORK - Soon after New Yorker Geralyn Lucas was laid off from her television job in January, she took her two-year-old son to the playroom of her apartment building. She realized she had never been there before. Within minutes she had inadvertently broken all the cleanliness rules. "I wore shoes," confesses Lucas, 41. "I brought food. I changed his diaper. I didn't know those things weren't allowed."

     

    When she took Hayden to his playgroup at a toddler center, she had to ask the little boy for directions to his class. And when she went to the pediatrician's office, the nurses were so used to seeing the nanny that they didn't recognize Lucas.

     

    Lucas and other laid-off women like her are involuntarily experiencing the life of a stay-at-home mom, and they are getting to know a lot more about the details of their children's daily existence. They are also discovering some of the things they have been missing.

     

    Though the mass layoffs of this recession have so far affected mostly men, more than 800,000 women have lost their jobs since the end of 2007. For the mothers among them, it means that, suddenly, Mommy's home, often for the first time in many years.

     

    For many of these women, unemployment has no doubt been terrifying. But for some - particularly those who have the financial resources to ride out the storm - it has been a precious opportunity to get to know their children a little better.

     

    Mary Quinn, a 48-year-old mother from Greenwich, Conn., was laid off in December after 18 years at a Manhattan investment company, but a severance package has bought her some time to find a new position. After years in which her husband was the main caregiver, she is finding the time off with her children to be an unexpected blessing.

     

    She is savoring small pleasures such as picking up her 11-year-old daughter, Paulina, from school and having a little snowball fight on the way home, or trying out new recipes with Isabelle, 17.

     

    "As a mom, it's been amazing," says Quinn, a former vice president and portfolio administrator at Oppenheimer Capital LLC. She notes with delight how, for the first time, she is the one who gets to hear the schoolday tales that Paulina comes home with.

     

    "I'm getting the stories from her directly now, not secondhand from my husband like before," she says. "I used to be so envious."

     

    But as she well knows, many laid-off mothers have no time to smell the roses.

     

    "I can't say I've seen any mothers who see being laid off as a positive thing," says Jessica Polsky, a career counselor at New York's Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty. "Even if it's $10 an hour that they made, it's something, and they really needed it. They need to get out and get new jobs."

     

    Even for women who may have a financial cushion for at least a few months, it is hard to focus on the joys of your family at a time of economic crisis, says Carol Evans, CEO of Working Mother Inc., which publishes Working Mother magazine.

     

    "It's very difficult to juggle anxiety about the economy and pleasure with your kids," says Evans, who herself was laid off from a job 10 years ago and recalls feeling a combination of happiness - at the possibility of a summer with her kids - and panic. "And anxiety is at a fever pitch right now."

     

    Milwaukee mother Shelley Ziech was laid off about a year ago, and her husband got the ax six months later. That has made Ziech's job search even more urgent, but she is still thrilled about the time she is getting to spend with Elizabeth, 12, and Martin, 19.

     

    "It's been one of my greatest joys," says Ziech, 56, who as a sales manager was on the road several nights a week. "Before, I felt like the manager or director of a family. Now I get to do the Mom things - making the lunches, taking my daughter to school. It's been fabulous."

     

    Editor Sasha Emmons, 34, was laid off in January while pregnant with her second child but found a new job a month later.

     

    "It was a mixed bag for me," says Emmons, the Brooklyn mother of a 3-year-old daughter. "On the one hand it was definitely nice, especially pregnant, to have a bit of a rest. And my daughter loved me coming to pick her up from school. It was nice to do art projects and cooking, baking and yoga class together."

     

    On the other hand, "I would have enjoyed it a lot more had I known that everything was going to be OK financially," says Emmons, now an editor at a parenting Web site.

     

    She also learned something from her brief experience being laid off: Financial pressures aside, she prefers working.

     

    "I just felt kind of lost without a job," Emmons says. "Everyone talks about the mommy wars, and you always have that question as a mother: Is the grass greener on the other side? For me, the question was answered."

     

    Lucas, the Manhattan mom, has drawn a similar conclusion, though she is grateful for the chances she didn't ever expect to have - like the snow day she spent recently with her fourth-grade daughter and a school friend, taking them to a pizza lunch, listening to all the school gossip and spoiling them with a trip to buy candy.

     

    As for Quinn, her younger daughter recently delighted her by announcing she had decided to forgo any summer activities - she just wants to hang with Mom.

    Once her older daughter is ensconced at college in September, Quinn hopes things will begin moving on the job front. But until then, she plans to make the most of it.

     

    "I want to be able to look back and say that I didn't squander this time," she says.

Comments (8)

  • wow...how neat and at the same time how sad that some of them were given the blessing of being home with their children, to find they loved it, but to choose to go back to work. We have been as you know put in the position of me maybe going back to work, but it is just not something we believe will be good for the family...God will meet our needs, maybe not all of our desires, besides those are just luxuries...I do trust my Lord to take care of us!

    Love you Susie!

    Kel

  • I think it is great that at least some of the women see the "silver lining"

  • I stumbled across your xanga and glad I did. I just ADORE your little profile photo!!!

    And I was reading your profile.....wanting to go see Mt. Rushmore-did that.....I was so dissapointed!! LOL Crazy Horse is the place ya need to see!!!  (in the same area too)

  • @jimsruby - Crazy Horse it is then!!!  

  • @kafekotka - I so agree Ana.  I guess because I have been home since the beginning, I was just so dumbfounded at some of the things the mothers said in this article.  It was a big wake up for me.

  • @Kainos - You know...we have been there and when we ignored our convictions I got a job...and the Lord had to clobber us with a 2x4 and a disaster to make us realize..."No..I will provide."
    Cling on to Him who is able.  We are praying!!!  Love you too!!!

  • @suzsea - LOL! You're easy to please, huh!!  

    We went to Rushmore, and dont get me wrong, its nice. But it is so small! If you go to Crazy Horse, or pull it up on the web, Mt. Rushmore will fit inside the top of the head of the momument of Crazy Horse !!!!! ITS HUGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! They have worked on this monument for @ 50 years, and it wont be completed for another 50 they say!

  • i found this sad. these mothers are letting others do their jobs that God gave them and even when they realize they like it they turn their backs on it.  they don't even know where their child's classroom is! and the pedatrician doesn't know them but does know their nanny! a sick child needs a mommy.

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