Only Fun For Stay-At-Home Dad
This Guy Says To Forget The Housework
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Mike Paranzino plays with son Cameron (CBS/The Early Show)
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Laughing, stay-at-home mom Marybeth Vazquez says, "It would be wonderful. I would probably have more children."
At 39, Mike Paranzino has saved enough money to hire a maid service, and he says they are sacrificing fancy cars and vacations. But the group of stay-at-home moms says even if they had the money, they could never get away with it.
"When I see the mess, I will just naturally clean it up," Eisha Locascio says. "I notice when my husband comes home, and he sees the mess, he'll ask me to clean it up."
But Mike Paranzino says the mess is not important.
He advises, "Show him where the detergent is and say, 'You do it, because I'm focused on the kids. I'm going to go read the children a book instead of doing the laundry.' "
Singer says, "He's a trail blazer; but he's a trail blazer with a staff."
Trail blazer or not, Paranzino has had some uphill battles, especially early on.
"It took me about 14 months to really get comfortable in my skin," he says. "I did feel isolated for the first year, and I used to sort of feel a need to tell people: 'Well, I do some consulting.' I think it was a macho thing."
As for his friends that are not full-time dads, Paranzino says, "They think it is amusing: the play dates with all the moms. Even though I spend my days with beautiful moms and nannies, I mean, there are kids around. Let's just keep it clear."
So joking about the play date only goes so far.
He says, "There's more sexual tension on the metro than there is at playgrounds."
Paranzino does try to make time for his advocacy work, which he says keeps him sane. Otherwise it's 100 percent all kids all the time.
"Dads can do this," he says. "It doesn't have to be mom home with the kids. Dads can do it."
And as long as the kids like take-out food, life is good.
Before you send your e-mails, Smith notes that many stay-at-home dads do housework.
The census says that 98,000 dads make a deliberate decision to stay home, but there could be up to a million fathers home with the kids because they are unemployed or disabled, so there are more out there than you'd think.
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