April 9, 2007 @ 10:30 pm
Stay-at-home-Dads Tripled in Ten Years
There are now three times as many US men who choses to be home with their kids, as there were ten years ago. Nearly 160 000 guys has put their careers on hold for a while, to spend their time with their toddlers, changing diapers, reading stories and playing with trains.
According to the US Census Bureau, there are 159 000 stay-at-home fathers currently in the United States, a more than three-fold increase from 1996 when they numbered 49 000.
Researchers and associations that represent these fathers, however, estimate their number to be closer to two million, as the Census Bureau figures do not take into account fathers who work part time or from the home.
And they’ve come a long way in the quarter-century since the bumbling dads in the 1983 hit Mr Mom starring Michael Keaton. While it may have popularised the term, the film treated the species as an oddity, a stay-at-home dad who is there because he lost his job, struggling to cope with diaper-changing, meal-cooking home multi-tasking handled “easily” by women.
As the number of men who decide to become Mr Mom grows, so has the number of support groups, play groups, blogs and products tailored to their needs, such as outdoor jackets with inside pockets large enough to hold diapers.
There is even an annual convention for stay-at-home dads where they exchange ideas, recipes and tips on child rearing and how best to cope with the initial sense of alienation and loneliness that comes with the job.