I work for myself, so I have some flexibility, but I would absolutely never go on one of my H’s work trips with the kids. There’s absolutely no way you’re going to get any work done on these trips and you would effectively have to take the time off of work. Trying to work on a laptop in a hotel room with two screaming kids is absolute hell. No is a complete sentence. If she can’t be away from your DCs, she needs to decline work trips or find another job. |
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I travelled for work a few times when my child was a toddler. I recorded some videos of me reading his favorite books and singing his bedtime song, which my husband showed him. I facetimed with my son, when the timelines matched up, so I could say hi and he could see me.
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| This request is bananas. I travel for work~ monthly and I always leave my kids at home. Work travel is for work not bringing the family along and trying to rush back to them in the evening. I use the evening time to catch up on work I missed while traveling or go out to dinner with co-workers. |
Wut |
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My youngest went when she was a baby to Boston in a combined work/pleasure trip with in laws, husband and older sibs. I had a two hour meeting in Boston.
She also went to West Coast with the whole family again (not the in-laws that time) for another work/pleasure trip. Again, had a couple of meetings lasting an hour or so. Then she went with my husband and I to California for an interview dinner, where they were really trying to recruit me. I didn’t go but they were really nice and she was such an easy baby. |
Took my older DD (just the two of us, not my husband) on a couple of trips to the West Coast when she was a teen. Now she is grown, but she told me recently she felt really special on those trips. I think it depends what you do, how long meetings (no more than an hour or two) are, is your employer or client family friendly, what are logistics for your child - is it a safe, family friendly area etc. Now she is taking business trips of her own to CA and feels totally comfortable! It took a long time for me to realize that they learned something from me as a working mom. I spent so much time feeling guilty and they didn’t really mind at all. Ironically, I don’t travel at all anymore with Zoom etc. |
| I feel like we’ve maybe lost some family-friendly attitudes in the workplace. We’ve gained the ability to work from home and travel less due to zoom, but we’ve lost incorporating family into the workplace. Take your kid to work day etc. |
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I think your wife is just having some anxiety about being away from your kid and this is how she's expressing it. It's not really reasonable and your kid will be better having at home than dragged on a trip. My spouse travels a bit for work but makes a strong effort to be really present and spend lots of time with the kids when he is home. They're quite close.
I'd be firm no on this, it's not what is best for your kid. She'll be anxious but she needs to rip thr bandaid off. It will be better after she does it once and realizes everything was fine. |
| I expected "once in a blue moon" to "never" (as in, maybe travel would be to a super fun family-friendly location that we'd all enjoy and we could make it work), but once it came down to it-- never. |
Don't follow this advice. This PP and you are trying to be kind. But your wife is clearly highly anxious and maybe a bit depressed because her proposal makes no sense. Nip it in the bud with a firm and absolute no. |
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Part of why this is tough is because toddlers generally really into routines. That's not to say you don't occasionally bust their routine for a good reason but "waiting all day for mom to be finished with her meeting" isn't a good one. And getting a toddler to sleep in a new place is tough. Again worth it for the right trip, but just coming along on a business trip?
She's feeling anxious and guilty about leaving but she really shouldn't be. Kid will be fine at home with dad. |
| What? Why would your child travel with you on a work trip? I waited until my child was a little over a year old and used a work trip as an opportunity to finish weaning her, but I have friends who have traveled when their children were infants and just took the pump and made sure they were able ship milk home on ice or bring the bottles home on the airplane. |
| So it's not eve about breastfeeding it's just that she thinks she'll miss them? That's what FaceTime is for. What a weirdo |
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I never combined my family and work travel.
I had an F500 corporate job where at least every 3 months, sometimes every 2 months, I'd have a 4-5 day trip to a metro area about 5 hours flight away. Going on one of these trips was how I finally weaned one of my toddlers. There were no provisions or acceptance for spouses and kids to leverage one's hotel room. And my hours were long during the trip. There were events happening from about 8 AM to 9 PM. My husband asked a few times but I told him there was no safe way to ask for this privilege...I didn't think my coworkers would sympathize and I couldn't even have fun in the "downtime". I had managers who were older women...one of whom had taken her mother on a business trip or two. I had a married MBA classmate who got pregnant unexpectedly during her first two years at McKinsey after graduating. She had the baby and flew a nanny with her to engagements on the West Coast. Eventually she relaxed into an HR/recruiting job. I thought she was a very smart person but kind of a flake. But she pulled off early motherhood with one of the highest-paying just out of school gigs. |
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Never!! I prefer my work and home life very separated.
Regarding dhs work travel- I’ve accompanied him occasionally at the end of his trip so we can go on a longer trip, but I was never there interrupting his work trips either. |