DP: You are imagining some ideal that never existed. You have anxiety. |
We have 3 kids; different activities different nights. It isn’t like we signed up for travel sports. If you want kids to get into college, they need to build skills early; middle and high school you are already behind. It’s a miserable arms race, I agree. Carpools in our neighborhood died with COVID — so many parents WFH they just figure it’s easier to just drive their own kids then coordinate with other families. I mean that’s key you had a short commute; not possible now, probably because housing is so much more expensive now. I would like to see how your night schedule worked |
Yeah we have not. And I’ve been to ED 4x in last 4 years, have a rare disease (like I will probably be someone’s paper, which is not an enviable position). Who is your insurer, we pay for the best plan from our employer so maybe you should shop around if you are a high need family. |
| I don’t think it’s that hard and it’s just me. I am DCUM poor too. But I also stopped at one kid. I know my limits. Most people I know who kept going are suffering. If one kid is hard, what do you think 2+ will be? |
Sometimes life isn't hard for the dad with 1 kid, so he doesn't catch on that life will be hard for him with 2 kids. |
Don't fold it. I stuff sheet sets into a pillowcase. Towels I do fold. Everyone gets their own basket of clean to put away however. |
DP I am so glad you haven't had issues with insurance claims. We didn't for years, until we did, and that is because we switched to the expensive plan (still worth it because we simply couldn't access the care we needed on the old one) |
Shop around? Thats not an option for employer sponsored healthcare. Youve been 4x in 4 years? Thats not really that often and rare is only rare due to diagnosis not actual incidence of the disease. Lastly, there are entire groups of state-level employees who keep insruance companies and healthcare servicers in check. I have one submitted right now to the MD AG because the company keeps sending me bills that I dont owe. Ive had to get my insurance company involved as well. You may just not be looking at your bills that closely. Thats on you. |
| What makes it bad is when a dad has to leave for work just when the kids are coming home from school. Worse yet for dads having to 2nd shift on weekends when the kids are home from school. |
I so identify with this comment. Not so much about my husband, who leans in a ton, but the rest of society that acts like I am SO LUCKY to have landed a guy that is such a great dad. Meanwhile, I have the much more demanding job and still do as much. (I do feel lucky, by the way, but it is so grating when everyone fawns over him for doing what he's supposed to do as a dad). |
| We moved our entire family across the country to a southern state we didn’t know anyone but found jobs in for this reason. Our life is so simple now. Just move, it’s 2026. You’re not on the Oregon trail, it’s not nearly as difficult as it sounds. |
Better yet- make your kids fold. My 7 year old DS folds all the clothes and my 4 year old folds socks. 4 year old also is a great gopher and runs underwear and socks to their drawers in each person's room. My 9 year old does dishes. We've always had them do like 15-30 min of chores a day and they don't even complain. |
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I think - if you don’t want to hate the rest of your parenting life - you have to either move or find a PT or at least hybrid job for one if not both parents.
We have both - DH (primary breadwinner) works in office 2 days a week (but also has night events 1-2x a week and work travel about 1x every other month) and I used to SAH and now only work PT. DH’s office is in Tyson’s and is 25 minutes from our house. It’s still not easy, but it is more doable than what OP describes. Something has to give, somewhere. You just decide where. |
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My kids are in their twenties and I honestly think that when people their age say "I don't want to have kids, or maybe just one. When I'm older" it's because they remember what it was when they were growing up and how hard it was with two careers, a couple of kids, a cat, a dog, extracurriculars, no family help nearby, etc. etc. etc.
- They remember the year that my husband and I seriously SPLIT a weeklong vacation with the kids where he flew out on Sunday-Wednesday, then I flew in and finished the vacation with the kids while he flew out because we couldn't make our schedules align. -They remember the god-awful succession of au pairs and nannies we had, the upsets when they quit, the absurd lengths we went to to keep them, the one that totalled the car with the kids in it, the one that had the boyfriend that was ALWAYS THERE even though we sent him home frequently. -They remember the 'roster' of meals we had, served the same on Mondays, Tuesdays, because it was the only way we could cope. -They remember the year that my 'big gift' on Christmas was an electric blanket that you could plug into the car to stay warm while hanging out at someone's extracurricular practice in the parking lot. -They remember my husband and me tag teaming their swim practices and the time I arrived back from some business trip halfway through their swim practice and I was so tired I couldn't remember their names, etc. etc. etc. Good times. I kind of see why they don't want it for themselves. |
I dunno. My parents never read to me or helped with my homework. My dad worked a lot and my mom is educated but didn't speak English very well at the time. The notion that kids that don't learn to read and write and do math just have bad parents is a bad excuse for poor instruction and gaping inequities in our education system. |