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Why Men Make Better Housewives Part 5


The fifth advantage men have over women is probably the greatest one. We can’t get pregnant (which is yet another benefit of just being a man). Since we will never have to carry a developing child inside our bodies, we never have to do that at the same time we are taking care of that child’s older brothers and sisters. When a Stay-At-Home-Mom gets pregnant, she has to carry her new job—that of baby factory—along with her on her current job—that of mother and homemaker.

Imagine doing everything you have to do every day—feeding, bathing, and changing the baby; potty training and driving the toddler to preschool; driving the school-aged kid to school, then soccer practice, then piano lessons, then to her friend’s house; cleaning the house, doing the dishes, doing the laundry, making dinner, fixing the car, mowing the lawn, recalculating the angle on the satellite dish. Now, imagine doing all of those things while a growing organism steals all of your nutrition.

A fetus has been called a “perfect parasite”. That means that the baby gets fed first. Anything mom eats gets divided into two servings: whatever the baby wants and whatever is left over. If the mom doesn’t “eat for two”, she doesn’t eat. The baby is fat and fine. Most likely, after the meal, he is floating around in the womb with his hand in his pants, burping and settling in front of the T.V. Mom is left to fend for herself.

If mom does consume enough for herself and the child, chances are pretty good that her share won’t sit very well.

“Mom, can you drive me to soccer practice?” the ten-year old son asks.

“You’re going to be a little late, Sweetie,” Mommy groans. “Mommy’s got her head in the toilet.”

“Again?”

Dad, on the other hand, has no ill effects when the old Gestation Ball begins. Aside from a little “sympathy weight gain”, we don’t change at all. At one month or nine, we can handle all of our responsibilities with the same acumen that we had when there was one child in play and none on deck.

We do get additional duties when our wife gets pregnant. We have to take care of her, along with her children. A pregnancy is a tough thing, and it is our job to treat our wife, the mother of our children, as if she were a queen. Why? Two reasons: First, think of what she is going through. It is a terribly difficult strain and she needs all the support she can get. Second, if we carry her through pregnancy, she cannot turn around after the delivery and say, “Hey, I carried this child for nine months. Now it’s your turn.”

©2008, Mark Phillips

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 Women, it's true, make human beings, but only men can make men. - Margaret Mead

Mark Phillips is a Stay-At-Home-Dad and freelance writer. Along with raising his four children, he is developing a franchise called “The Vacuum IS a Power Tool.” It is designed to help SAHDs maintain that which makes us men, instead of hairy Mom-substitutes. He earned a B.S. in Communication/Theatre Arts and teaching certificates in English, public speaking, and psychology from Eastern Michigan University. After six years as a high school English teacher and Director of Dramatic Arts at Powers Catholic High School in Flint, Michigan, he changed careers and became a Stay-At-Home-Dad. www.TheVacuumIsAPowerTool.com or E-Mail



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