I have so many opinions about this, Scottie. I'm not LDS but I think, due to my profession, that I qualify for offering comment.
Scottie wrote:Before I ask my question, I would like to state that I am doing this in a respectful manner with a genuine curiosity as to how you feel. I'm an not making any judgement calls.
Good intro, good approach. :-)
That being said, why is there so much animosity towards the brethren for requesting that women stay home and raise the children? At the risk of sounding sexist, I do believe that the different genders have qualities that are different.
I agree that the different genders hold gender specific traits, however, it's not a black/white given. The differences are due to brain functioning, hormones, socialization and get this, evolution.
Men, typically, are the ones that want to earn the paycheck.
Hunters.
Women, typically, are the ones that want to nurture the family.
Gatherers.
It's not a matter of what men or women "want to" do, Scottie. It is a matter of what they are built/wired to do.
When I was growing up, I had a working mother. In the field she was in, she typically had Fridays off. Those were the best days for me! There was something wonderful about coming home and having my mom there. It wasn't necessarily bad on the days she had to work, but Fridays were just that much more special to me. Had circumstances allowed, I would have loved my Mother to be home every day.
That's because every child benefits from the security of a nest.
Perhaps the women of the board could help me to understand why the teaching to stay home and raise the children is so wrong?
I don't think it's a matter of the teaching being "wrong". I think there are multiple reasons why women might find it offensive or limiting. I should probably wait until I have more time to prepare a response but since that's not going to happen, here goes an off the cuff list:
1. Not all women want to have and raise children.
2. The message itself is that "there are limits to what you are permitted to do".
3. The limitations ignore the many talents of women and their potential to contribute to society as a whole.
4. Since the limitations/
permissions are transmitted primarily from males, women resent being dictated to by males. (Well, this one does :-)
5. The limitations ignore the multi-layered dreams and hopes of women.
6. The limitations don't allow for the possibilty of women fulfilling more than one role in their lives.
I could do better than this, I don't have time.
Let me say this, but quickly. I do believe that the best situation for a child is to be raised by a primary caretaker for the first 5 years of their lives. I believe that beastie mentioned the importance of the first 3 years, however, I would extend that to age 5 or possibly 6. Basically, when the child is in school full time. It has to do with how children develop a sense of security, self esteem, positive self image, confidence, and social learning via the process of assimilation and accomodation.
The bonding experience is relevant to how the child will come to view themselves, people they encounter, and the self esteem that allows to them to approach the world with confidence. The optimum (oh, here I go) bonding experience begins with immediate family, then grandparents, other relatives, people in the community such as pediatrician, teachers, baby sitters, etc. Think of it a series of concentric circles with the family in the center. The child's social sphere increases with their increasing social experiences. The anchor for the child, the safe haven, the solid footing, the foundation of the universe, if you will, is the parents.
That said, what a child needs most in order to thrive, is one person to fall in love with them, who thinks the sun rises and sets on them, who is faithful to respond to their call for interaction. I can tell you that I have met numerous fathers who are willing and able to fill this role better than their wives.
Falling in love with a child isn't gender specific.
Each parent, in a two parent home, has a stake in the child's well being and I think the problem with the LDS teaching is that it attempts to place a role on each gender that isn't particularly necessary and ignores the individuals that fill those roles.
Generally speaking, women are natural nurturers, men are natural providers. The woman's brain is built for multi-tasking,the male's brain is built for a linear, more single focused response. Women are talented in the area of intuitive response, men are talented (I love this line by Dave Ramsey so I'm stealing it) in their ability to "kill it and drag it home".
That doesn't mean that there are no men who aren't able to intuit the needs, feelings of others or that women cannot bring home provisions for the family tribe. Of course, they can and of course, they do.
I would have less of a problem with the churches teaching if it wasn't so locked into assignment by gender and more supportive of this if it were more child-focused. In other words, what the child needs and let the family choose who provides it and how.
What matters most to the child is that he/she is loved and cared for consistently by (we hope) someone who has fallen head over heels with him/her.
(I said I didn't have time for more than a quick reply, I obviously lied. ;-)