7/1/2023 0 Comments Bartender mom tik tok![]() ![]() ![]() “The first thing off the bat was having to take a bunch of unpaid leave.” “It’s been amazing having Robert, but things are not really setup for moms-especially new moms-in the industry,” Bose says. Robert was born just over a month early, and Bose’s steady paycheck came to a screeching halt. I thought I would still be working for two more weeks.” “My due date was July 15 and I planned to take time off at the end of June,” says Bose. It was all worked out: A schedule that made sense for her and her bosses, a plan to save up enough money before taking fully unpaid leave-but Robert had other plans. ![]() While pregnant with her son Robert in summer of 2016, Bose ( pictured above) planned to take some time off from her two bartending jobs before she gave birth. A paycheck on its own would’ve been a huge help, let alone insurance.”Īccording to reporting by Bloomberg from 2015, only 6 percent of service industry workers get any kind of workplace benefits. “Touching on the fact that I had to take two and a half months without pay-that was hard. “I 100 percent think women in the bartending industry have been left behind in regards to workplace protections,” says Ranjini Bose, who bartends four nights a week at New York cocktail bars Seamstress and Dear Irving, and had a baby last summer. But bartenders are in particularly dicey territory as most service industry establishments don’t offer benefits or workplace protections in line with the typical 9 to 5 workplace. Of course, paid time off and parental leave are hotbeds for social and political debate-the protections and health coverage offered by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) may be short-lived. One of the most problematic issues that professional bartenders with kids face is the extreme lack of workplace benefits. “If we want to be considered a real profession-a profession that will allow women to move up in the ranks and become more than college sports bar bartenders,” says Mains, “we’re going to have to find a comprehensive family plan.” Not only is the bartending industry not considered particularly family friendly-from the late nights of slinging drinks to the often complete lack of benefits or job security-it’s also just beginning to find its footing as a full-time career path for many people. The challenges faced by all new and expectant mothers are amplified when those mothers are working behind the stick, and Mains certainly isn’t alone in her effort to make what many consider an untraditional career path work in tandem with starting a family as we’ve reported in the past, women make up 60 percent of the bartending industry. “What may seem to many people in the Midwest to be a very untraditional and unacceptable role for a woman, to me, I couldn’t survive having it any other way.” “I want to have both and I’m not going to choose-that’s not an option for me,” says Mains. “And I think that I have failed in some areas at keeping the balance.”īut instead of giving in to criticisms and stepping down from her ownership and management roles in Oklahoma City’s burgeoning food and drink scene to care for her son full-time, Mains is forging ahead. “I’ve tried hard in a lot of ways to figure out the balance between work and family, which is difficult in any business, but especially in this business,” says Mains. Now, with a toddler and a two more cocktail bars-Silver Lining and Rum Rebellion-underway, Mains ( pictured above) is wrestling with a dilemma that’s all too familiar to modern working mothers: Figuring out how to balance a fulfilling career with motherhood. I get a thrill out of feeling like I’m hosting a party, an escape for people.” ![]() “To me, hospitality is what has always attracted me to this business-I have always loved and believed in over the top hospitality. “In those first few months when I was stuck on the couch breastfeeding, I read a lot of cocktail books and started to get that bug,” says Mains. Less than a year and a half later, she opened her first cocktail bar-and third business- Rockford Cocktail Den. Two and a half years ago, Anna Mains gave birth to Nixon, her first and only son. ![]()
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