DINK to SINK: becoming a single earner household

“How do you feel about your wife not working?”

Someone posed this question to David at a party we attended this past weekend. Trained in survey research, my first instinct was to leave the room so as not to bias David’s response. But I stayed and heard his answer, the same one he delivers whenever this question arises: “It’s great!”

And it is great in many ways for both of us. I’ve taken major responsibility for a lot of the household duties (shopping, cooking, laundry), leaving David more time to do math. We can travel together. I get to devote my full time to writing, and I no longer cry everyday. I’m a lot happier, and this has made us happier as a couple.

But we do miss the monetary ease of our former dual income, no kids (DINK) lifestyle.

One night a couple of months ago, David and I went to a restaurant in our neighborhood for a pre-dinner appetizer. The plan was to have beers and a few oysters (spend $40 tops) and then head home to cook dinner. Of course, this didn’t happen. We ended up ordering an appetizer that was so good we wanted a main course. We ordered a couple more beers and dessert. The final bill came out to well over $100.

Even in our dual-earner times this meal would have been extravagant, but given our current constraints, it felt foolish. The restaurant, an upscale place with a casual vibe, was filled, and I remember looking around the room at the other patrons and feeling a sense of disconnect, like I used to belong in this world but no longer.

We buy our beer at the supermarket rather than a craft beer store now. We buy cheaper coffee. We don’t go out to eat as much, and when we do, we’re more conscientious about what we order. We haven’t had to give up much, and I know how lucky we are that we live comfortably without me working.

I don’t know if it’s sustainable indefinitely, but for now, my not working is working for us. Just ask David. He thinks it’s great.

My dissertation was my first baby

I was a graduate student attending an informal academic gathering. The topic of conversation: childbearing. I mentioned wanting to have kids. An older male professor responds, “Well, your dissertation is your first baby.”

He intended the comment to be humorous and delivered it like the common wisdom it once was in academia. I was offended but swallowed my protest.

I regret not calling him out on it because I’ve come to discover in the years since that the “academia first, personal life second” attitude harms both academics who intend to become parents and those who don’t. Can we agree on these things: (1) a university landscape populated purely by single-minded academics with similar reproductive trajectories is less rich than one that allows members to draw fulfillment both within and outside of academia; (2) everyone has a right to a personal life regardless of stage of academic career or family status; and following from these, (3) obstacles that keep graduate students from having children when they want to should be addressed.

Despite my aversion to the implications of the professor’s statement, the idea of a dissertation baby appealed to me, and I decided to co-opt the term.

Now, I’m not going to suggest writing a dissertation is on the same order of magnitude as having a child. Creating a human being, raising that person to adulthood, being accountable 24/7 seems a much more onerous task and a level of responsibility I’m not sure I’ll ever be willing to engage. But there are parts of writing a dissertation I think must be like childbearing: the thrill of finding a research question and witnessing the dissertation develop into something more than you’d imagined.

I first felt I’d stumbled upon something that could become my dissertation on the same day the tree-sitters were removed from the oak grove across from my department at UC Berkeley. For close to two years, they’d been protesting the university’s decision to cut down the oaks and build an athletic facility. On this day, there was only one tree left standing, and contractors were building scaffolding around it to assist with the removal of four protestors gathered at the top.

A few of us from the department watched from a balcony across the street. The construction proceeded slowly, and while we were waiting, I showed a professor some graphs I’d made about gender differences in variability in life span.

“Interesting, I’ve never seen this before,” he said.

This is something every graduate student longs to hear. Finding a research question that pushes the edge of human knowledge is a major obstacle to writing a dissertation.

The scaffolding was built, the tree-sitters removed, the seed of my dissertation planted. It was the beginning of my fourth year, and over the next two years, I broadened my research question, reviewed the literature, made a lot more graphs, and wrote everything up. There were days where I had major breakthroughs, but for the most part, writing a dissertation is a slow plod toward the finish line. I PhinisheD in May of 2010.

I stopped by my old department last month when I was visiting the Bay Area. I chatted with a couple people and then went up to the attic. The library there houses the only print copy of my dissertation. I felt compelled to hold it.

Partly, I wanted to make amends because at times I’ve felt like a neglectful mother for not having tried harder to publish my dissertation results in an academic journal. I know my unwillingness was a sign academia was not the right fit for me, but I still feel guilty. And this guilt makes me feel unworthy of taking on new projects like the novel. I have difficulty trusting myself because I haven’t taken every project I’ve started to completion.

Holding my dissertation in the attic, I didn’t feel guilty. I felt reassured. I produced a dissertation baby, and if I work hard at it, I can make a novel baby too. And if the urge strikes me to have a human baby, I can try to do that as well, whenever it feels right.

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Ways I’m like my dad: reading

When I think about my dad, the picture that pops into my head is one of him reading a book on an armchair with a cat in his lap. I think it’s his most natural state and certainly the primary image I have of him from my childhood.

My dad reads a lot, as does the rest of the Zureick family. At family gatherings, everyone brings their own reading materials, and before or after dinner, it’s totally acceptable to withdraw from the conversation and read. I like this about my family, our intergenerational commitment to the written word.

When I was a young, my dad would take my grandmother, my sister, and me to the library every week. Now that I’m embarking on a writing career, I’m especially thankful to my dad for his dedication to this activity. I may have waited until my thirties to become a writer, but I’ve been a reader my whole life.

sarahanddad

Ways I’m like my dad: we look alike

In the week leading up to Mother’s Day, I wrote a series of posts detailing the ways I’m like my mom (here, here, here, and here). Since Father’s Day is this coming Sunday, I’ll do the same for my dad starting with a very general observation: we look alike. Here’s a photo from my wedding to prove it.

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I feel like “we look alike” is the kind of response you give if you don’t have anything in common with your parent, but my dad and I share a lot of traits. So stay tuned.

Get to Know Me at 23* #YesAllWomen

I’ve been encouraged by the recent outcry against misogyny that’s fallen under the umbrella of #YesAllWomen. Here’s my #YesAllWomen story, which originally appeared on my Xanga in November of 2005.

Last night I went into the city for a concert… I was intentionally looking pretty hot for the occasion.  As I was leaving, this young guy at the bar smacked me on the butt.  I turned around and said, “that was inappropriate.”

 

He replies, “Come on, you know you wanted it.”

 

To which I quickly and firmly reply, “No, I didn’t.”

 

I was very proud of myself.  This was definitely one of my best feminist moments because I was so on the ball and direct.

I’ve been composing this post in my head for about a week now, but I’ve struggled to post it because I keep wanting to qualify the story in some way. I’m going to resist the temptation to do so now.

*Excerpts from my Xanga that I posted on during my senior year of college and first year of graduate school.

We go where the math takes us: Bay Area

Just got back from one of my favorite places in the world, the Bay Area. David and I met as graduate students in Berkeley so we try to get back there as much as possible. This time our travel was math related. David attended a workshop on rational points at the American Institute of Mathematics (AIM) in Palo Alto.

On Saturday, after the conference was over, we spent time with a couple of our best friends in San Francisco. I wanted to see the water so we went to the Presidio and drove out past the Golden Gate Bridge. The day was warm for San Francisco. Birds flew overhead, and I longed to be one of them, surfing the wind and diving into the water.

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I didn’t want to leave yesterday when our trip ended. I love my life in Atlanta, but I miss the beauty of the Bay Area and our friends who live there. I’m sad today because I want to go back, but I know what I want to go back to doesn’t exist anymore. Most of our friends from graduate school live elsewhere. We’re no longer in our twenties.

And I know my life then wasn’t as rosy as I remember it, but it’s hard to imagine life in the Bay Area as anything but perfect when you look out over the water to the hills across the way.

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Celebrating one year of nonemployment

One year ago today I left my job and became nonemployed. At the time, I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do. I thought I would try a lot of different things: crafts, volunteering, part time gigs. Instead, once I started drafting my novel last July, I wanted to devote all my time to writing. For the most part, I have, making steady progress on the novel and honing my craft.

Nonemployment, our Honda Fit, and an abundance of SkyMiles have allowed me to accompany David on most of his work related travels this year. The math led us to many places in the Southeastern United States (Winston-Salem, Davidson, Clemson, Columbia) as well as other parts of the country (Ft. Collins, Baltimore, Palo Alto, Tucson). We travelled abroad to Banff and Copenhagen.

It’s been a great year filled with joy I didn’t know I was capable of experiencing.

Thanks to all who have been supportive of my transition, especially my husband, David. Let’s keep it going!

davidandsarahcopenhagen

 

 

Ways I’m like my mom: performing

My mom inspired my love for the stage. When I was in grade school, she would direct our school plays and talent shows. Sometimes we would have a script, but most of the stuff was student led. My mom would start the rehearsals with improv games, and eventually we’d come up with sketches and dance routines as a group. I remember playing Cousin Itt in an Addams Family sketch, a mummy in a “Walk Like an Egyptian” dance routine, and one of the most feared nuns in my Catholic grade school’s history. The shows were silly, fun, and empowering for us kids since we played a major role in creating the sketches.

Before I was born and when I was very young, my mom was part of an improv troupe in Cincinnati. She told me recently that she was once in a scene where she pretended to be George Carlin’s pregnant mother parachuting from a great height. So now I know my first improv role: George Carlin as a fetus.

Something that has always impressed me about my mom is her ability to set people at ease. Even if she’s not performing in the traditional sense, she still has a way of entertaining a crowd with stories. I’m glad to be like her in that respect.

A photo of my mom from her improv days:

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Me performing improv with my group Shark Party at the SweetWater 420 Fest:

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Ways I’m like my mom: DIY bling

My mom loves shiny things. When I was in college, we both got into beading and made dangle earrings. We called them “man lures.” Lately, she’s been producing yard ornaments, decorative windows, and felted wool animals. She’s the queen of DIY bling. I’m grateful for the times we’ve gotten to work on projects together as well as the decorative gifts I’ve received from her.

My mom’s yard bling:yardbling

Her aquarium window:aquarium

A felted frog I made hanging out with a squirrel my mom made for me:woolpets