
"Because of what I get to do for work, I can still stay home and pay all the bills, and my wife will have to go to work to make her money. And I have a one-year-old daughter, so I'll stay at home and take care of my daughter. And I can clean the whole apartment while watching her before 12 or one o'clock."
"To all the stay-at-home moms, I feel like you're lying. And while I'm taking care of her, I can give her three meals a day, change her on time, get her into her naps, play time, arts and crafts time, and still make sure the entire place is clean. So can someone please tell me, when does being a stay-at-home mom become hard?"
Popular parenting hashtags created spaces for stay-at-home mothers to share routines, struggles, and moments. A stay-at-home father used those hashtags to question the authenticity of many mothers' posts. The father works a well-paid remote job, cares for his one-year-old daughter during the day, and works evenings after his wife returns from her job. He described consistently meeting feeding, changing, nap, play, craft, and cleaning schedules and asked when being a stay-at-home parent becomes hard. His video prompted many commenters to agree with him and label mothers with negative terms, while others pushed back.
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