Juggling during Lockdown: Balancing Telework and Family Life in Pandemic Times and Its Perceived Consequences for the Health and Wellbeing of Working Women
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Rigor and Reflexivity
2.6. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Telework—Characteristics and Challenges of a New Labor Scenario
And, on top of all that, you were expected by your employer to be available 24/7. They could call you at any time. It didn’t bother them. At whatever time they felt like—it seemed like you had to be on call all the time.(Ana)
The problem with working from home is that it’s not regulated. It’s like you have to be on line 24 h a day, 7 days a week.(Clara)
Well, one thing is working from home when there’s nobody else there, and you can focus, and another thing is having to work from home because you’re forced to stay in with the kids. That’s not working from home, that’s not the real “remote work,” because you don’t get a certain amount of time to be on line working and showing what you can and cannot do.(Ana)
There were some advantages, or at least what I see as advantages, but there was also the downside of “When do I stop?” Right? When do I really switch off and leave? That’s what happens when you work in a real office—you just turn off your computer and go home. But now your home is your office in addition to your home. So, you don’t do it.(Emilia)
My husband started to work at the baby’s changing table. Well, our baby’s changing table is quite a big table, so he used that as his office, and I was in the living room. On days when we both had to work in the living room, then we both sat there, on either side of the dining table. That’s all the space we have.(Marta)
Well, they sent [the laptops] to us by mail. Basically yes, he did have to work from home, he had no option. He went into a quiet room so he could carry on working.(Emilia)
Working from home doesn’t mean work-family balance; it just means working in your house. That doesn’t mean that you can balance your work and family more easily, like you can take care of the children. You’re working, you’re not with the children. You can either do one thing or the other. They sold us this idea that working from home promotes work-family balance. I don’t think this is the perfect solution—working from home is not how you balance your work and family life.(Mercedes)
They don’t like [telework]. For example, the minimum staff was kept here in the office. Almost everyone did work from home, but then in June people started to come back and I was also pressured into coming back. And I was like: “But I’ve got the children…”(Marta)
Working from home because of the pandemic has many good things, because it helps you balance your life… You can take them to school, come back… I mean, it’s me who does all the parenting. That’s been a clear advantage.(Carla)
There’s a lot of positive things about being at home. When you have two kids who take up a lot of your time, you’re more relaxed, because you can sleep longer. We save two hours by not commuting to work.(Cristina)
3.2. Survival and Chaos—Inability to Work, Look after Children, and Manage a Household at the Same Time
3.2.1. Constantly Combining Work and Childcare within the Same Physical and Temporal Space
But the first few days were wonderful, because you have a lot more time to take care of the house. It seemed idyllic. But if that drags on, it becomes catastrophic, because it went on for so long! Work ended up taking up almost my whole day, and then I had to juggle to get everything done.(Cristina)
Actually I just survived. I didn’t have time to get organized. I was trying to cover basic needs, getting the girls dressed. I say “dressing” because otherwise it meant leaving them in their pajamas all day. And then you have to feed them breakfast and leave them plugged into something, right? Surviving was the only option.(Sara)
You don’t get either the time or the focus you normally need for work. You’re constantly combining things. Now you come in, now I go out in an hour, but then at one o’clock I need to log onto a meeting. Now you get a phone call, you say “OK, I’ll pick up.” But I’m with the kids, so when the kids realize you’re on the phone, they go completely wild.(Eva)
During the day, zero balance. I couldn’t. I just… I was not a good mom or a good employee. Nothing, not at all. I don’t know how other people see it. There was no balance for me.(Inés)
Work-family balance is a bit like finding an agreement, saying “OK, come on.” I mean, I’m not from here, and I am not Superwoman, and my husband doesn’t have to be a Superman. Clearly you do as much as you can. Keeping the bathroom nice and clean, well, even if the bathroom and kitchen are clean, then, if you can’t make the beds because one day there’s no time to make the beds, well, you just don’t make the beds.(Ana)
3.2.2. Strategies Adopted to Survive the Lockdown Routine
“What you can’t do is get up at 5 o’clock in the morning to work” [the doctor would tell her] and I said “OK, yes, but it’s the only way we can get by.” One of us gets up at dawn while the other one stays up all night… Otherwise, nobody can work with a little girl at home.(Nerea)
Well look, working from home during the lockdown was real madness, I mean, damn crazy. I’d start work before my normal start time. I’d get up at 6 a.m. or 6:30 at the latest, and I’d start to work to catch up… I was returning phone calls till really late.(Ana)
We were all going through more or less the same. I’d have my daughter sitting beside me, alright, but this guy on the phone there would have his three kids jumping and screaming around him. In the end, we all understood people’s situations. We were all working but we knew that, at the same time, we were stirring a lentil stew, or doing whatever it was time to do.(Consuelo)
I was working very early hours. Some other people were working in the evening. We were never forced to coordinate. We weren’t asked to work from such time to such time. It was up to everyone’s responsibility really. So, if they let me do as I thought best, then the least I could do was to be there for them if they needed me.(Nerea)
Some people might have coped very well, but for me it was untenable.(Nerea)
The bad thing is that you don’t even get your commute back home [laughing], whether it’s short or long. As soon as I walk out this door, the children begin asking for this, crying for that […]. You walk out of your room, and you’re done with work. There is no transition.(Carla)
By saying “no” to certain things. Maybe, back at the office, I would’ve normally said “yes,” but it was obvious that I couldn’t take any more. I was so overwhelmed that I’d say “no” to any extra things they’d ask me to do. I was already working a lot by doing the basic mandatory minimum. I was putting in an extra half hour in the evening, you know, to sit and catch up as much as I could; well, I couldn’t take any more than that. I think I also protected myself a bit, by saying “no” to certain things.(Eva)
Unfortunately, I had to throw my values away to survive work and perform well. I had to allow them many more TV hours than I would normally be happy with. To be honest, that actually stung me quite a lot, but it was the only way they would leave me alone and I could focus on my work.(Consuelo)
And you can’t tell them to go play on the street, because you can’t. You have to use what you have in the house. We have TVs, tablets and mobile phones. So then, in the end, all mothers are a bit guilty. I’m letting them abuse this technology, which I don’t like. Right? But then I also saw on social media that many moms said the same. They felt the same way, didn’t they? I understood I wasn’t the only mom doing that, even though I was having a tough time.(Inés)
3.3. Is Co-Responsibility a Matter of Luck?—Challenges When Sharing Housework during Lockdown
3.3.1. Childcare Remains Primarily a Female Task: School Support and Greater Mental Burden on Women
The small one, I know he did it in good faith… But handicraft? Really? I don’t have time to sit around with my child to paint and cut and paste pictures! I can’t, I have to work. I don’t get paid to sit and paste pictures.(Inés)
I remember, with my child, it was ridiculous. I wrote to his teacher, I said: “Look. We’re just not going to do certain things.” Because they’d ask you to print out the task, then you had to do it, scan it, and then send it to them over Google Classroom. My seven-year-old obviously doesn’t know how to do that, so it was me who had to do it.(Blanca)
I was trying to get up as early as possible. I’ve always liked getting up early, but it’s like this for women—we’ll never know if that’s because of our nature, or because we have such a long day ahead, and we have such little time for us as mothers, that maybe we just assume that—the fact that we like getting up early. But maybe we don’t.(Blanca)
About that, I do think that he and I have a good balance, and we’re both aware. But there is still this mental burden, which is this invisible burden which lingers, and I’m sure it affects me more than it does him, because I do think this is something we have in our DNA as women.(Mercedes)
I mean, everything you tell him to do, he’ll do it, but he doesn’t think for himself—zero. He doesn’t even remember to put the kids’ snacks in the bag before going to the park. Nothing, nothing at all. It’s me who goes “we have to do this and that,” “we have to wash them,” “we have to put their clothes on,” “we have to eat,” “we have to go shopping”—anything that needs thinking, it’s me who does it. Then he does what he’s told to do. But no thinking.(Alba)
3.3.2. Co-Responsibility and Partner Conflicts
At the beginning we more or less got along, but then it became maddening because work was very important, both for me and for my partner. None of us want to lose our jobs, and that’s how we got into many conflicts. Because, well, you feel that what you’re doing is very important, but so do I, my work is also very important. And that’s how we got into conflicts because I wouldn’t understand how he’d put his work before caring for his children in a situation like that.(Cristina)
I remember how he said: “Oh no, no, I have to work my eight hours, I have to stay up in the studio and work my eight hours”. And I was like “Wait a minute, let’s see. I also have to work my eight hours” […]. I was very surprised when he said: “Oh no. I’m going up there and isolate myself from them.” Well, you can’t. I’ve said many times, that sentence meant a lot more. It was the lack of understanding for what I was going through.(Blanca)
That was how, in such a situation, conflicts arose between partners. These conflicts were linked to establishing priorities and boundaries between productive work and sharing the housework.
Then the weekends came and I was like “Oh no, I don’t even want to sit with you and watch a movie, because we’ve spent all week arguing about this or that.” And then things would mellow down and we started to communicate again.(Consuelo)
I think this does one of two things. It either unites you as a couple or destroys you. It either unites you, and you say “come on, let’s team up, we can do this together,” or you start fighting each other and you say “look, as soon as this is over, I’m getting a divorce.”(Ana)
3.4. Breakdown of the Care and Social Support System
3.4.1. Women left Unprotected, with No External Support
Not having any occasional external help. Before, my child would spend a couple of hours with his grandparents, or they would pick him up, feed him, and get him to take his nap. That kind of thing can free you up for a whole afternoon, or one morning, and of course, we no longer had that.(Clara)
It’s not only having the children at home. Before, they were looked after by someone else for eight hours a day, but now you have to look after them for those hours. There were also a number of hours a week when someone could come and help you at home, but now they can’t come either. These are all things that you have to do on top of your work.(Eva)
Well, clearly, when it came to balancing work and family, we were left on our own. Because there was no alternative, you had to do as you could, at home, with the kids. It was your problem. So it was very complicated. Not feeling supported [weeping]. They were saying they would give benefits to parents so they could take some unpaid time off—or something. I don’t know, they would announce these things, that maybe could have helped, but nothing came out of it in the end.(Marta)
The bad thing for me was having no school. So then we made the decision. It took us two weeks, before catching up and then realizing what was happening, and then my baby—it was so demanding.(Carla)
About work, well, they could have hired other people, unemployed people, to do the work during that period, and then I could’ve gone back when the whole thing was over.(Irene)
It would have been easier, during the hard part of the lockdown, if they’d let people who do housework to continue to work at other people’s houses or caring for other people’s children; if they’d let those people carry on working. For example, during the lockdown, it would have helped to have a young neighbor in the same building, boy or girl, say a 20-year-old, who could’ve come over to my place for a couple of hours and be with the children. As if it was essential care.(Eva)
3.4.2. Invisible Care Crisis and Need for Acknowledgment
Maybe, this issue should have been talked about more. Nobody talked about how hard it was to work from home! When they talked about the pandemic and the people working from home, do you think they thought about people with small children?!(Blanca)
I have a great need for acknowledgment by my partner. I need him to realize all the work I do. But I may not do it well, because I ask for it so much, I get annoying. I seem to be complaining all the time; I have this urge to say: “I did the laundry, I hung out the clothes to dry, I also made dinner, and now on top of that the children behaved really badly, and all of that during my work”(Carla)
3.5. Decline of Health by Women Trying to Balance Work and Family Life
3.5.1. Mental Health Effects: A Roller-Coaster of Emotions and Stress
I noticed it especially in the way I treated my husband and my children. I knew I wasn’t talking to them like I normally do. I mean, I became numb to how to treat my children. I was totally numb as to how to treat them. I’d try to have them sit down, to do what they were told at once. I wanted them not to make things more complicated. And that was impossible. I spoke terribly to them.(Cristina)
I was much more irritable. I’m usually very calm and sweet. But during that time I would snap, I would get loud, I was getting so angry. I couldn’t bear it; I had no patience with my children. I would scream at them at lot. It wasn’t pleasant […]. It was very stressful. When months went by, I started noticing it in my head, how much more sensitive I felt. I wanted to cry constantly, I felt I couldn’t cope with everything.(Sara)
I would have liked something, really. I know it sounds hard, but I mean something psychological. Some psychological help… I know it really sounds hard. Someone to say to me “Come on, Beatriz, this is how we’ll do it, everything is going to be alright, we’ll sort it out. Your children will be alright, everything will be alright. They won’t have trauma.” I don’t know, something, a little bit more help.(Beatriz)
At some point I noticed I was getting anxiety. Well, there was a day when I had to take a Trankimazin [alprazolam] because I was like, if I don’t, I’ll have a panic attack. But I had to take it, because I could feel it, I had this sensation… Now this, then that, and that, and that…(Marisol)
As soon as I begin to talk, I start crying. I guess it’s affected me. All this time. Well, generally, my lifestyle and everything, now I do notice it’s become a bit of a knot. Because this is how upset I get every time I think about it. I understand that I’m not doing very well […]. It’s like I have something inside me that snaps at certain times.(Alba)
3.5.2. Fatigue and Stress as Part of a Routine
Getting up at 5 a.m. to work… In the end I did it so many times! In fact, on some days I got up even earlier, at 2 a.m., because I just couldn’t sleep, and I worked till 8 or 9 in the morning… And then I would carry on all day. Obviously, I wasn’t getting any rest… I was exhausted!(Nerea)
I like taking on many things, doing many things at the same time, because I’ve always done it. But right now I’m so tired […] because I’m not getting any sleep. I sleep very little. That’s the worst thing for me. I get very little sleep, but I don’t feel tired during the day. But I do feel I’m in a terrible mood.(Alba)
3.5.3. Self-Care Deficit
Nothing. Zero. I had no time for anything. Some people were watching series, doing yoga, but I couldn’t do anything. I couldn’t read, or watch series, or do yoga. I couldn’t do anything—nothing at all. All I could do was work and combine that with the housework—taking care of my child—and nothing else.(Marisol)
It was either work or the girls. There was no option to say “wait, I need five minutes alone” […] especially thinking I cannot waste any time on myself, because I’ll get behind on work. I mean, I won’t sit and enjoying reading a book if I’m lagging behind with my work. Mentally, I didn’t even allow myself that option.(Luisa)
I went through a really bad week, because I had to work. That’s all I could do. I was getting so upset then, I felt I couldn’t cope. I didn’t even have one hour for myself!(Blanca)
You eat worse, because you always leave yourself to the end. That’s true. As long as their lunch was fine, and their tea was fine, I could get by with a nibble.(Carla)
It was the first thing I gave up. Having to log on to that one hour of Pilates with an on-line instructor was causing me even more anxiety. I was so anxious to log on, that eventually it was more stressful than not doing it.(Sara)
3.5.4. Lack of Exercise and Changes in Bodily Perception
I lost weight. I get very nervous and you can see it in my body. I got very skinny. Yes, I lost weight, because you don’t do any exercise, and I don’t enjoy food so much. Also I get so nervous, so in the end you can see it in my body, you can tell I’m not doing any exercise.(Luisa)
I did, I got very fat, and normally I’m quite slim. I got very fat because of the anxiety. I guess we all get this anxiety when something so strange happens. What we went through was so hard, and all I did was just sit there, I never sit for so many hours.(Beatriz)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym | Age | No. of Children | Job Sector | Currently Teleworking | Full- or Part-Time Work |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nerea | 41 | 2 | Public | No | Part time |
Carla | 41 | 2 | Private | No | Part time |
Clara | 41 | 1 | Public | Yes | Full time |
Ana | 42 | 1 | Private | No | Full time |
Luisa | 40 | 2 | Public | No | Full time |
Beatriz | 44 | 2 | Public | No | Full time |
Loreto | 40 | 3 | Private | No | Part time |
Eva | 38 | 2 | Public | No | Part time |
Irene | 42 | 2 | Private | Yes | Full time |
Cristina | 37 | 2 | Private | Yes | Full time |
Consuelo | 35 | 1 | Private | No | Full time |
Marisol | 54 | 1 | Public | No | Full time |
Mercedes | 38 | 4 | Private | No | Full time |
Emilia | 42 | 1 | Private | No | Full time |
Marta | 36 | 2 | Private | No | Part time |
Blanca | 42 | 2 | Public | Yes | Full time |
Sara | 41 | 2 | Private | Yes | Full time |
Inés | 42 | 2 | Private | Yes | Full time |
Questions |
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Theme | Category | Quotes |
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Telework—Characteristics and challenges of a new labor scenario |
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Survival and chaos—Inability to work, look after children and manage a household at the same time | Constantly combining work and childcare within the same physical and temporal space |
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Strategies adopted to survive the lockdown routine |
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Is co-responsibility a matter of luck?—Challenges when sharing housework during lockdown | Childcare remains primarily a female task: school support and greater mental burden on women |
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Co-responsibility and partner conflicts |
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Breakdown of the care and social support system | Women left unprotected, with no external support |
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Invisible care crisis and need for acknowledgment |
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Decline in health by women trying to balance work and family life | Mental health affected: a roller-coaster of emotions and stress |
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Fatigue and stress as part of the routine |
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Self-care deficit |
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Lack of exercise and changes in bodily perception |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Loezar-Hernández, M.; Briones-Vozmediano, E.; Ronda-Pérez, E.; Otero-García, L. Juggling during Lockdown: Balancing Telework and Family Life in Pandemic Times and Its Perceived Consequences for the Health and Wellbeing of Working Women. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 4781. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064781
Loezar-Hernández M, Briones-Vozmediano E, Ronda-Pérez E, Otero-García L. Juggling during Lockdown: Balancing Telework and Family Life in Pandemic Times and Its Perceived Consequences for the Health and Wellbeing of Working Women. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(6):4781. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064781
Chicago/Turabian StyleLoezar-Hernández, Mariana, Erica Briones-Vozmediano, Elena Ronda-Pérez, and Laura Otero-García. 2023. "Juggling during Lockdown: Balancing Telework and Family Life in Pandemic Times and Its Perceived Consequences for the Health and Wellbeing of Working Women" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 6: 4781. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064781