A new study has found that US fathers are spending significantly more time with their children and less time in paid work, marking one of the biggest generational changes in how men divide their days.
A new study has found that US fathers are spending significantly more time with their children and less time in paid work, marking one of the biggest generational changes in how men divide their days.
Interesting that non-college educated fathers are still parenting more despite not working less. Thats evidence of a cultural shift towards increased expectations of fatherhood, which is a good thing. But for the lower class, low income fathers, this probably wont be sustainable and will result in burnout and health problems.
That means the important thing for those suffering from burnout is to know where their boundaries are and how to stick to them. The extra anxiety comes from the urgency others put upon us. Family life moves at its own speed and business needs to understand it does not get priority.
In theory I love that but poverty is full of untenable catch 22s in reality. You don’t get the luxury of boundaries if your family needs food.
This is written like someone who hasn’t lived in real economic struggle.
I wonder how the “rest” usage compares between men and women for that demographic. I know for a while men had more than women overall and for low income groups.
I do think we all need to work less for more income (our "productivity results have said this for a long time). Especially for those in lower income brackets.