Not everything is about money. |
A lot of people are hybrid/remote or they travel for meetings etc but not in the office everyday.
Also a bunch of people (including my DH) are currently unemployed/SAHD due to the loss of govt and other DC type jobs. We are in Bethesda so socioeconomically similar to your neighborhood probably. Most parents of both genders are in casual clothes at dropoff (we walk to school) which is a little before 9 for us. |
If you had a kid at 39 you'd be 51 when they are leaving elementary school... |
Wage slavery doesn't create wealth. I am a business owner, so I only dress up for special meetings and do a lot of work on phone/Internet and travelling, not dressed up at an office. Anyway you didn't say what percent of dropoffs are these casual dads. WFH dads and 10am job dads and unemployed / retired / heirs / flexibly employeed dads are over represented at dropoff, obviously. |
OK, enjoy giving up money and family for the honor of going to work at your special job at 9am. |
+1 LOL. No they don't all work in sales. Do you not know anyone in your bubble who works as a health care professional or has an international facing career where the time zones may necessitate different work hours? |
This is the norm in my neighborhood. I am one of the younger moms having had my kids early 30s. Some are much much older and usually the worst behaved socially 60+ with elem or middle school kids and it's just a different set of values in what you allow and what you are overly strict about. |
I often see mothers wearing yoga pants and other casual clothing when they drop their kids off at school and I, too, wonder what jobs they are doing dressed like that. I mean, do they go home and change before Zoom calls or before heading into the office (late)? |
My block I say zero go to an office every day.
Of women, 95 percent are stay at home Moms or retired. Of men most own their business or work from home or part time. There are two of us who go to office. Me, two days a week and a neighbor who is a diplomat who drives to DC. Houses are all 2-2.5 million my block. And I drive to work I ofen cut through Betheda and Potomac between 745 am and 845 am and tons of 40 something Dads in short or even PJs at bus stops. If anything more women in the less expensive parts of town work. Nurses and Teachers are in person. |
We have four kids. When my youngest graduated college I was 52. I retired at 53. Elementary school kids in your 50s is old AF. |
I think there is a causality issue here. 9am is pretty late to be starting a commute to the office! The people who have to work in an office are gone long before 9am. The people who don’t have to go into the office are self-selecting into a 9am school drop off. |
So, in my 50s, as I said. And that's much older than the other parents. I feel like the young mom in my oldest's kids class. |
Having a kid at 39 in my town would make you a very young mom or dad. I had my last at 45. My good friend had his first at 49 with his 42 year old wife and to my suprise had three kids the last one at her 47 and him 54. He lives in a super rich town where second and third wives are common. He is actually a young dad. He has Dads in their 70s in the elementary school. It is all perspective. No one bats and eye Bruce Willis, Alex Baldwin having kids at their age. Janet Jackson had a kid at 50 and Halle Berry had one at 47. |
They may not bat an eye but it's still old. But, no, women aren't cranking out kids in the 40s, especially late 40s like candy. It happens, but it's still pretty rare. I was 39 but my husband was even older. He can't related to a lot of the younger dads at the elementary school. |
It really depends on how much wealth their family has. For many of them, they are definitely burning up their family fortune. However, if your family has a significant amount of wealth (min 30M+), and you have only at most 2-3 kids per generation it’s possible to maintain a comfortable this lifestyle indefinitely and subsidize each generation. |