China Daily

Mothers: Work fears voiced Trust and support

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Tao, the author of a play about full-time mothers that debuted in Shanghai last month, said many of these women are looking for new ways to improve themselves, to continue learning and be actively involved in society. Some are pursuing profession­al qualificat­ions, while others are teaching yoga and donating their earnings to autistic children’s charities.

Tao’s play features four stay-athome mothers talking about their insecure financial situations, a lack of communicat­ion with other adults, and concerns about the difficulty of returning to work after their children grow up.

Marriage experts said that they had noticed a rise in the number of stay-at-home mothers in cities.

But they said this was still a “luxury” for this relatively small group for various reasons, such as whether the husband’s income can meet the entire household expenditur­e, or if the couple can progress on their career paths at the same time and respect the advances each of them has made.

Chen said her life as a stay-athome mother is even busier than when she was in full-time employment.

In addition to daily chores, she has never missed one of her son’s fencing classes, violin and viola lessons and performanc­es, or summer camps. She has been an art enthusiast since childhood, and all these activities provided her with material for her drawings.

Despite being a full-time mother, Chen still found time to take classes at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing for two years, paint a book cover, and translate a book about the history of contempora­ry Western art from English to Chinese, together with two friends.

She was also heavily involved in her son’s school activities, such as introducin­g Chinese paintings from old dynasties and the history of Western art.

In the late 1980s, Chen, an elite student, majored in physics at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei, Anhui province, and worked in the US with her husband for many years before settling in Beijing in 2011.

She said she was initially confused about her identity after becoming a stay-at-home mother, as she once went to a bank to apply for a new card, but when she filled in the form and wrote that her occupation was “housewife”, the clerk changed this to “unemployed”.

“Now, I describe myself as an art consultant,” she said.

Another stay-at-home mother in Beijing, who wanted to be identified only as Yu, said she has tried to become involved in different social roles in recent years, including working as a volunteer at a museum in Beijing and as an assistant at a Finnish-language

school in the capital. Both she and her husband worked in Finland for a number of years.

Yu, who gave birth to her second child nine years ago, said such roles had enabled her to stay in touch with her surroundin­gs and to avoid the fear experience­d by most stayat-home mothers of being excluded from society.

Chen Yiyun, a marriage researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, suggested that before they wed, couples should discuss whether the wife will become a stay-at-home mother, and that such a decision must be made on the basis of adequate mutual trust and support.

Mothers said the husband’s attitude plays a key role in whether the wife can be truly happy with her new role at home.

Zhang Song, whose wife has been a stay-at-home mother in Shanghai for six years since the birth of their son, said that it was a joint decision for her to give up her job at a bank to be with their son as much as possible.

“I fully appreciate her diligence and dedication to our home,” said

Zhang, 37, an accountant. “I don’t want her to feel insecure because she no longer has an income. It took me three years to prepare to start my business, during which time she footed the bills. That’s how a family works,” he said.

Chen Yiyun said the main concern of stay-at-home mothers is the difficulty in resuming their careers, and called for more legal protection for them.

“In some Western countries, such as Denmark and Sweden, there are laws guaranteei­ng that new mothers can return to their jobs within a certain number of years after taking a break to care for their babies. When seeking new jobs, they are also given priority among applicants with similar qualificat­ions.

“That’s how a society recognizes the social value of such mothers, who dedicate themselves to raising the next generation,” she said.

Tao, the playwright, who was a stay-at-home mother to two children for six years, said she recently talked to three such mothers in the US, and each appeared very confident and positive.

“They all told me that their family and friends, especially their mothers who were full-time mothers themselves, favored their decision. This is rare in China,” Tao said.

She hopes that one day stay-athome mothers in China, like their counterpar­ts in the US, will win widespread respect from society.

Tao, who graduated from Fudan University in Shanghai with a major in journalism, returned to work as a copy editor in April.

“Stay-at-home mothers either won’t have a pension or just a low pension if they stop working. This is also a source of their sense of insecurity,” she said.

In some Western countries, such as Denmark and Sweden, there are laws guaranteei­ng that new mothers can return to their jobs within a certain number of years after taking a break to care for their babies. When seeking new jobs, they are also given priority among applicants with similar qualificat­ions. That’s how a society recognizes the social value of such mothers, who dedicate themselves to raising the next generation.” Chen Yiyun, marriage researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

 ?? NIU JING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Some welleducat­ed women are opting to become full-time mothers in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai. Many are still eager to fulfill their talent and potential, in addition to caring for their families.
NIU JING / FOR CHINA DAILY Some welleducat­ed women are opting to become full-time mothers in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai. Many are still eager to fulfill their talent and potential, in addition to caring for their families.
 ?? ZHANG NAN / XINHUA ?? Left: Miao Shuling, a stay-at-home mother, takes care of her blind son in Siping, Jilin province. Right: He Yunyi chose to stay at home to look after her two children in Dongguan, Guangdong province.
ZHANG NAN / XINHUA Left: Miao Shuling, a stay-at-home mother, takes care of her blind son in Siping, Jilin province. Right: He Yunyi chose to stay at home to look after her two children in Dongguan, Guangdong province.
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PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY

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