-1000 OP, continue to take care of your health. |
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12 school performances? 10 doctors appts? If you can’t pop out for a half day you are in the wrong job. Brain surgeon maybe. But few people are that indispensable. Especially when most jobs allow remote and flex arrangements— work early in AM or evening to make up.
As for missing dinners routinely, that’s just sad. One parent should be able to shift schedule enough to be home 6pm for f sake. |
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We have been totally fine with tons of childcare for our kids. We have a child with profound special needs so we have someone every weekday from 2-9, Saturday 9-9 and Sunday 12-9. We are around too a lot of this time, but this gives us flexibility to do stuff with our other child, run errands, get stuff done, etc.
We have never really eaten family meals together because our oldest has such profound needs that it just never worked out that way. We are totally fine with routine doctor stuff being handled by a nanny including typical sick appointments. But we have regular ped, developmental ped and neurologist for the SN kid. My hsuband attends her specialist appointments. Our other kid had brain cancer when she was little. We did the once a month all day chemo and the two week blood work when her WBC count was most likely to dip. Nanny did week 1 and week 3 bloodwork. Brain cancer treatment took 2.5 years and included two brain surgeries, a week or so in PICU with meningitis and 16 months of chemo. We split up the quarterly MRIs for several years post chemo. Now, I usually do the once a year neurooncologist. All that to say, once you have two kids with really serious medical stuff, it simply doesn’t seem to matter much about the yearly pediatrician visit or the strep throat test. The nanny can handle that nonsense. We also handle all the IEP meetings together. We usually have one of us at the kid stuff for school. But honestly, if we have to miss it with have to miss it. We only have one kid with school stuff really since the other one has such profound needs, there is nothing like that happening for her class. My non-SN kid still wants both of us at bedtime for about 45 minutes every night. We try to trade off so one does the full thing and the other one pops in. That is very special time for us, but I think trading off is fine. |
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This is going to sound counterintuitive, like how could you possibly have time, BUT… you actually need to balance four things… being good at your job, being a good mom, being a good partner, and being good to yourself.
The key to the lock is actually kind of simple, although difficult to implement: you have to take care of your first. If you’re physically and mentally healthy, the other three things actually become easier. For me, this means - getting enough sleep, eating regular meals, eating real nutritious food, staying hydrated, and exercising every single day. If you can do this, you will truly be amazed at how much easier it seems to manage the others because your head is clear. |
| Sorry. I’m likely not of the generation who comments here en mass (Gen X and my kids are now young adults) but I don’t think you can do both - or do anything well under the rubric you outlined. I think one parent - for a considerable amount of time - needs to be on point. Otherwise what IS the point of having kids besides ego or FOMO? Also I can recognize a kid with too much day care a mile away…so disassociated it’s not even funny. |
For those ages they hardly do anything at the dentist. |
You just have a freaking easy or part time job. There is so little time in the day that exercising and obsessing about hydration is not on most working parents radars. |
What does this mean? I frequently experienced disassociation as a child. My mom was a SAHM until I was in middle school and then worked part time until she retired. |
It’s a lie you should ignore from someone seeking internet attention. |
| The one on your list I love outsourcing is school events. I go to 3-4 school events per year, the ones my student performs in after hard word. Every random event? That’s for retired grandparents and at-home parents. Truly the one time I went to a book fair it was just grandparents adorably reading and a subset of parents closely defined by attending such activities. Send the grandparents! |
My husband and I both work full-time mostly from home and have 3 kids. We exercise daily (usually when the kids are still asleep) and we prepare our lunches for the work week on the weekend, and also split cooking meals from scratch. Being fit and healthy is crucial for us to have the energy and mental health to deal with our kids. Every parent who I know who is often overwhelmed on a regular basis does not workout regularly. |
We always do doctor's appointments ourselves, especially specialist (eye doctor in our case), but would be fine with a grandparent if we had them living nearby. Not a nanny. Everything else I'd be fine with a nanny doing, just not every day |
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This is actually true, especially sleep and exercise. And a good marriage! Time with your partner is essential! Don't just "co-parent" (I cringe at that word) |
My kid just finished K. Throughout this past year she had 6 performances during the day (not first thing in the AM or right before dismissal, which is still middle or the day really). Add to that the Halloween parade and party, holiday party, 100 days of school party, valentines party, Mother’s Day event, field day, water play day, her birthday, “optional” sign up to come in and read to the class, and honestly probably another few random things I’m forgetting - that’s more than a dozen mid day activities that I feel guilty if I miss and my kid feels bad if I miss. It’s just untenable. I don’t go to everything because I can’t and my kid gets that, but it still sucks to have to explain that I can’t come on a random Friday at 11 am for a “unity parade” or volunteer at field day. But at her school (NW DC), most parents have flexible jobs and make it in for nearly all of these things. There’s a handful of us (healthcare workers, feds working at SCIFs, etc) who struggle. |