ten money questions for Dana Rudolph

Our Best of Queercents week continues with another post by Nina
Smith.

Dana Rudolph publishes Mombian, a
website for lesbian moms. Don’t worry; Mombian is not a “mommy
blog
” where she’s posting about what her adorable toddler did
today. There’s none of that here. Instead Dana is online, typically
twice a day, providing sustenance for moms that’s served up in a
newsy, lifestyle format. She covers parenting and politics and
everything in between including finances! I asked Dana for her
perspective on money… as a parent, as a partner, as a child, and
as a stay-at-home mom.

  1. Mombian includes the practical side of parenting and
    one such resource is your frugal list of
    baby
    gear essentials
    . We all know that children
    cost a heck of a lot of money. Are they worth the
    expense?

    If I wanted to be flippant, I’d say “Ask me when my son turns 18.”
    In truth, though, I’ve known from before he was born that it’s not
    about the money. That’s not to say kids should be
    overindulged–just that they’re priceless.
  2. What is your most significant memory about
    money?
    My parents often said “Let’s wait till the end
    of the month” when any of us wanted to buy something. We weren’t
    poor, but we were pretty much using up my dad’s paycheck every
    month to cover the necessities. At the end of the month, when he
    got paid, we might use a bit to cover a few extras. It taught me to
    be frugal and patient with my spending.
  3. What is your worst habit around finances?
    My one big indulgence is books, and I tend to buy even when the
    library would suffice.
  4. When you gave up a career at Merrill Lynch to stay at
    home with your three-year-old son what were some of the adjustments
    made in shifting to one income?

    I had to learn to rely on my partner for support without feeling
    guilty every time I wanted or needed to spend money. She had to
    learn not to let the pressure of being the sole provider get to
    her. As it happens, though, I had been the only breadwinner for a
    year just before and after she gave birth, then we switched. We’re
    thus better able to understand what the other is feeling about
    these issues. In terms of practical adjustments, we did cut back on
    some spending, like dining out, but we were pretty frugal in the
    first place. We’re also not able to put as much into pure savings
    now, though I know we’ll start doing so again when I go back to
    work.
  5. Which is more important: how much you make or how you
    spend it?

    How you spend it. This says much more about one’s core
    values.
  6. Do you and your partner see eye-to-eye on
    money?

    For the most part, yes, and that’s a big benefit to our
    relationship. We’re both savers, but not misers.
  7. I read
    one article
    about your online venture
    that says “Mombian” keeps you from becoming “mombie”. How important
    is it for stay-at-home parents to keep one foot in the adult/work
    world?

    I think it’s very important. We don’t immediately lose all our
    outside interests when we become parents, and we need adult
    interaction to keep us balanced. None of our children would want to
    become parents themselves if they thought it meant giving up
    everything else in their lives. Non-parental interests force us to
    step back and not become smothering, obsessive parents. They can
    also help keep our skill sets sharp for going back to outside
    employment. One has to find the right balance of child/adult time
    for oneself and one’s family, though. There’s no single formula
    that works for everyone at every stage of parenthood.
  8. If you could buy one thing right now what would it
    be?

    My partner and I are in the process of moving to a new state, so
    I’ll have to say a new home. If I was going to choose something
    frivolous just for myself, I’d get a KitchenAid stand mixer–the
    575-watt kind that makes the lights dim when you turn it on.
    Cooking is my one claim to domesticity, and I’ve wanted a bad-ass
    mixer for a while.
  9. What is the most important lesson you hope to teach
    your son about money?

    That it’s a means to an end, but not an end in itself.
  10. Does money buy happiness?
    No – or at least
    not in and of itself. I’ll admit that money can sometimes
    facilitate the things in which one finds happiness – a home for
    one’s family, a nice dinner with one’s partner, or a new iPod for
    oneself, for example. We have to create the happiness from these
    things, though – it’s not just handed to us as part of the
    transaction.

More about Dana Rudolph

Dana Rudolph publishes Mombian, a lifestyle site for lesbian
moms, offering a mix of parenting, politics, diversions, and
resources to strengthen and sustain lesbian moms in all their
varied roles. She lives with her partner of more than a dozen years
and their three-year-old son. Prior to motherhood, she worked for
over a decade in the online industry, at both the startup and
corporate levels. Most recently, she was vice president at Merrill
Lynch, developing marketing and business strategies for several key
online initiatives. She was also the first leader of the firm’s
global LGBT employee network.
Read other Queercents interviews in the
Ten Money Questions
archive.