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a working mom

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Will the completely imbalanced and unfair ways people judge working moms versus working fathers ever change? Screw that: even just moms versus dads. Will the ludicrous and unjust ways people view these two groups ever evolve? It seems that moms can do 95 percent of parenthood right, but just be scrutinized for the five percent they didn’t knock out of the park. Meanwhile, fathers get awards, praise, admiration, and “Awwws” for putting in a tiny bit of effort. Really, they get all of that for showing up for the five percent the moms dropped the ball on. This discrepancy is even worse among working mothers and fathers. The fact that we even still have the term “working mom” proves it. Nobody specifies if a working man is a “working dad.” He’s just a…dad. Or a…man. Here are unfair ways working mothers are judged, that working fathers rarely are.

 

a working mom

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Traveling for work

People are astonished when a mother takes the chance to travel for work or leaves for those out-of-town conventions. But what about your kids? Don’t you want to spend the weekend with them? Of course she does. And yet, people always make it seem like her choice to travel for work immediately means she doesn’t want to spend time with her kids.

a working mom

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Taking an out-of-town project

Then, sometimes, those long out-of-town projects come up that require a mother to leave her kid for a month, or leave town Monday to Friday every week for a few weeks. Again, people will be shocked. Again, people will see this as a direct reflection of how much she cares about her kids. Nobody feels that way about working dads who work out-of-town gigs. It’s seen as sweet that they come home for the weekends; not bad that they left in the first place.

a working mom

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Missing family dinner

If a working mom agrees to stay at the office late to work on a project, people ask, “What about dinner with your family? Who is making them dinner?” If a working dad stays late at the office, people may ask if he misses dinner with the family, but they don’t accuse him of neglecting his family.

a working mom

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Not looking flawless

Again, if a working mom appears in any ways to not have her sh*t totally together, people say she can’t handle it—people say she isn’t balancing work life and family life well. That’s what they say when she shows up with milk vomit on her blazer. If a dad shows up like that, he’s called a great dad—again.

a working mom

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Killing it at work

Perhaps a lot of people accept that mothers work, but even the “open-minded” crew will be appalled if a working mother tries to kill it at work. If she, for example, nominates herself for a promotion, people think it’s inappropriate and negligent, since she’s a mom. How can she take on more work, they’ll whisper.