Ann Crittenden's popular The Price of
Motherhood: Why Motherhood is the Most Important--And Least
Valued--Job in America, recently released in paperback, has become
the first feminist classic of the new millennium. Crittenden's
"mothers' manifesto" is an expose of the so-called "mommy tax," which
can include reduced job opportunities and salary for mothers, as well
as a lack of appreciation, often from working women themselves.
However, if there is a woman paying the "mommy tax"
by sacrificing her earning power to be at home full-time or part-time,
there has to be a man in the household supporting the family and, by
so doing, paying the "daddy tax." Crittenden, by defining "privilege"
and "sacrifice" only in terms of pay and career status, sees
disadvantages only for mothers and not for fathers. But what about the
price of fatherhood?
The average American father works 51 hours a week.
While nearly half of American mothers with children under the age of
six do not work full time, even those who do average only a 41 hour
work week. American men work the longest hours of any workers (male or
female) in the industrialized world. Men work 90% of the overtime
hours in the US, and are more likely to work nights and weekends, to
travel for work, and to have long commutes. All of these deprive
fathers of valuable time with their children.
In addition, men do our society's most hazardous
and demanding jobs, in large part because the higher pay allows them
to better provide for their families. Nearly 100,000 American workers
died from job-related injuries over the past decade and a half, 95% of
them men. There were over 100 million workplace injuries in the US
between 1976 and 1999, again the overwhelming majority of them
suffered by men.
Men dominate in all stress-related diseases,
including a two to one lead in heart disease. In fact, Gloria Steinem
once cited this in advising men to support women's careers, saying,
"Men--support feminism! You have nothing to lose but your coronaries!"
Less time with their children, long work days and
work weeks, job hazards and job stress--all of these are the daddy
tax. I know, because I've paid it. As the main provider for my family,
I worked 60 hour, six day weeks far from home, sometimes at hazardous
construction jobs. I missed my young son so badly that many times,
arriving home from work late at night, I would carry him around the
house on my shoulder, even though he was asleep. My fatherhood was the
hollow, joyless fatherhood many men endure--all the burdens of
supporting children drained of the pleasure of actually being with
them. At times it seemed the only interaction I had with my son was
disciplining him, the one parenting job which has not so generously
always been reserved for fathers.
One day I was so disheartened over the situation
that I walked off my job, pulled my son out of his kindergarten class,
took him to the toy store, bought him a race car set, and spent the
rest of the day playing with him. Fortunately, it didn't cost me my
job.
Even more fortunate is that, unlike many men and
fathers, I haven't been financially trapped in a hazardous job--what
men's advocate Warren Farrell calls the "glass cellar of male
disposability." A construction job I worked at when I was young
illustrates well the untold cost of fatherhood which many men pay.
I worked at a nuclear power plant in the South.
Every morning we strapped on our tool belts and hard hats, and made
the long climb up the rebar skeletal frame of the building. Once we
were 50 feet up, we hooked our hook belts around the rebar and then
leaned back to work, with most of our weight on that hook belt.
Leaving aside the blistering heat, the difficult reaches, and the
danger of someone else's tools falling on you, the reality was that
your life--minute by minute, hour after hour, day after day--was
dependent upon that hook belt.
One day a journeyman electrician called to me to
climb down and help him. He had a rope in one hand and his tool box in
the other. We walked over to a large room filled with immense
electrical panels. He told me to stand 10 feet behind him and hold the
rope. I had no idea why, but I did as I was told. He then made the
other part of the rope into a harness, put it on, and said "I'm gonna
work on these wires, and some of them are live. If I hit the wrong one
and start to fry, you pull me out."
I thought he was joking.
He wasn't.
He began to work and every once in a while he would
take a tool he was done with and throw it at my feet, saying "hey--you
awake? I got three kids to feed and they ain't gonna go barefoot
‘cause you aren't payin' attention."
"No, no, I'm here," I protested. "Why don't they
turn off the power so you can do this without being in danger?"
"Company won't do it. Too expensive."
"More expensive than your life?"
"To them."
"How come you don't just tell them ‘no?' "
"Can't. Got kids to feed."
"You could do something else. Go to college."
"No money for it--got kids, a wife, a mortgage.
Wait ‘till you get married and have kids--you'll see."
Lunch time was often the time for "scare the new
guy" on workplace injuries and safety. Every man had a horror story to
tell, either about what happened to him or what happened to his buddy.
The guy who shot his nailgun into a knot in wood and the nail glanced
off and nailed his hand to the wall--just before his ladder came out
from under him. The guy who sliced his fingers off with a saw and
stepped on one as he tried to pick them up one by one. The guy who
repaired power lines and hit a live wire while working 20 feet up and
is only alive today because his buddy kicked him off the pole.
Fortunately for me, with the exception of bangs and
bruises and falling off of a ladder a couple times, the closest I've
come to a serious injury was when I shot myself in the hand with a
nailgun--fortunately for me, a thin finishing nail. Later I did
carpentry jobs as a side business, but luckily I no longer have to
hang off the side of buildings or do other hazardous jobs. Most of my
carpentry skills now are applied toward building my kids a bunk bed or
a lemonade stand. But whenever I hear middle-class feminists like
Crittenden tell us of her woes as a woman (and Crittenden, who uses
herself as an example of motherly victimhood, tells us plenty of her
personal woes), I think of those men and of the sacrifices they make
to provide for their families and to give them safety and
security--safety and security that they themselves will probably never
have.
My life changed dramatically when my second child
was born--I switched from the traditional father role to the
traditional mother role. Now my wife enthusiastically pursues her new
career and I've cut my work schedule back to care for our daughter
during the day. I do all the cooking (and we never eat out or take
in), the dishes, the shopping, the chauffeuring, the laundry, and the
errands. Exactly as Crittenden did, I pursue my freelance writing
career at home, in between my household duties. Crittenden is deeply
bitter about this "sacrifice," but I consider myself to be quite
lucky.
Which is better, paying the mommy tax or paying the
daddy tax? There are advantages and disadvantages to both. It depends
upon the jobs and personalities of those involved. For me, being at
home with my young daughter has been the greatest, most fulfilling
experience of my life, and I'll always be grateful to my wife for
allowing me the opportunity. All of the "firsts" that I missed with my
son--the first words, the first steps--I've been able to enjoy with my
daughter, as well as countless other magical, irreplaceable moments.
And there's nothing better in the world than when my little daughter
walks up to me, puts her hand on my shoulder and says "every night I
go sleepies right here." I have no desire to return to a demanding
work schedule and be away from my kids. Given a choice, I'd rather pay
the mommy tax.
Crittenden has several worthwhile suggestions on
how to reduce the mommy tax, including universal preschool, a year's
paid leave after the birth of each child, and full benefits for
part-time work. I'm not sure how practical these ideas are, but I'm
certainly interested, since they could help mothers as well as fathers
and children. But how dare she, and other feminists, claim that the
burden of children falls only on mothers? Yes, Ms. Crittenden, there
is a mommy tax, but the daddy tax is just as large.
www.GlennJSacks.com

Glenn writes a regular column for the Los Angeles Daily
Journal and the San Francisco Daily Journal. His columns have also
appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles Daily News,
the Salt Lake City Tribune, the Sacramento Business Journal, and
others.