I made an unnecessarily inflammatory thread, but the issue at its core is a good one, and I wanted to get a solid discussion going. I hope people didn't take literally most of what I wrote, and GFY if that's the most retarded comment you can find, then you're probably not looking hard enough
Anyways, back on topic. Of the two preggos at my office, one is a single mother. She's not one of those super motivated, "got to have everything" career women. She's just someone who happened to get pregnant and doesn't believe in abortion. She only took about ~4 months off at the start, after which she started working part time from home. She slowly increased her workload over the next few months, and as of now she's doing 4 days, with normally 2-3 in the office and 1-2 at home. The important thing is, she made her intentions very clear right from the start: I'm not going anywhere, I'll be back to work as soon as I can swing it. She manages day-care etc for the slugger, and she hasn't slipped up on her work responsibilities. She leaves about 2 hours earlier than normal to pick up her son from day-care, but she's always online at night, answering emails etc. IMO, this is how you deal with it professionally.
The other woman is married, and so doesn't feel any of the same pressures. She knows she doesn't absolutely NEED this job, so she's milking the 1 year allowance dry. She's completely left the company hanging as to what her future is, and by the looks of it she's going to wait as long as possible before committing either way. We've had very little communication from her, and just found out a few weeks ago that she's gone overseas to visit her parents for 3 months. So, pretty much the exact opposite of the other one. Shows an utter lack of professionalism IMO.
Now, about a year ago, before all this happened, I was a staunch supporter of women's workplace rights. I am only human though, and I resent absolutely the way the second woman has dealt with the whole situation. Mostly because I ended up with roughly a third of what she normally does. Of course, this affects all my other responsibilities and the company is sensitive to this fact, and also to the fact that I don't enjoy the actual work itself.
It's hard to find a middle ground though. How do you fairly treat the person while also making sure the company and its employees aren't getting shafted? It's a tough question to answer.
I swear though, when the second one brought in her kid to the office for the first time, I felt like stabbing it with my fork and chucking it in the microwave.