Just wanted to say that I found my kids needed me more when they were teens than toddlers! |
You don’t need a full time job to find fulfillment or purpose. There are no paying, meaningful volunteer opportunities that wouldn’t conflict with your childcare arrangement, wouldn’t require you to go through the hassle and stress of hiring help and would keep you busy. |
This. |
+1,000 |
OP here. I forgot to mention that besides the 5 hour per week job, I also volunteer a ton at school and also at church. At school i'm the room mother for both of my kids' classes, and I also volunteer once a week at school for both kids. At church I'm a committee leader so I volunteer in that capacity. However all my volunteering is maybe 5 hours a month total so not a whole lot.
Since my husband can't leave work for school events, i feel that i need to stick with working part-time so i can be there for my kids school and extra-curricular events--school parties, birthday celebrations at school, events where parents can come in, I chaperone field trips, etc. My husband never has the opportunity to do any of these things. However, I'm pretty bored at home and feel unfulfilled. Most of my day is filled with the drudgery of housework and chores. |
I am the PP. My daughter is well loved and cared for by BOTH of us. Family is first but who is or who isn’t driving her to tap or swim class doesn’t define her self esteem or how much one parent does or doesn’t love her. Nice try! |
OP here. I'd love to work 10-15 hours per week, I think that would be ideal, but I can't seem to find a second part-time job that doesn't pay super low in order to do that. I was considering starting my own business in my field, but I feel overwhelmed by the process. |
You know, a lot of women are in the position you are talking about with stressing about childcare on sick days/snow days. Maybe you could make a little business offering back-up childcare.
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Agree, and wait until sports start. You might re-think an au pair for driving multiple kids. |
I’m in the same boat. DH earns $2m per year and I will always be the default parent. I’m responsible for our 3 kids. I have considered going back to work but next year, I will have kids at 3 different schools with different start times, end times and activities.
I would love a job that was from 10-2 four days per week. I don’t think such a job exists. |
Are you a troll drumming up the SAH vs WOH debate? OP, who are you without work? Everyone should know this. What are your interests, talents, hobbies? I mean, you don't need to sit behind a desk to be fulfilled. In fact, quite the opposite. You should be a rich and interesting person with ideas and dreams beyond your 9 to 5 unless you somehow do something you are *incredibly* passionate about. |
Yep. Nobody care if you don’t work OP. But there isn’t some unicorn flexible high paying fulfilling part time job out there. Everything is a trade off. |
If OP were man I'd be surprised if he got so much advice to volunteer rather than work. I'd suggest that the OP use this time to gain the skills to get a better paying job on the next few years. This time is a gift she should use wisely. |
Not Op. I’m a SAHM who also works 5 hours per week, room parents for my kids, active in PTA, work out, etc. OP, you don’t mention a housekeeper. We have a large house and I have a housekeeper and do very few chores around the house. My youngest only goes to preschool 2x per week though so I still keep occupied with the little one. I will be you in 2 years when my youngest starts kindergarten. I struggle with going back to work. Just the past 2 months, we went on 2 vacations, all the kids and I took turns being sick, I planned holiday parties for kids classes, hosted friends and family. I could not have done all that if I was working. I couldn’t host play dates on snow days and teacher work days. I would consider the $15 job though if I thought it was interesting work. We pay our nanny $25 per hour so it seems silly but I would consider it in the future. I’m Ivy League educated and have multiple degrees. I know I can offer a lot. I just don’t want to work full time and we don’t need my income. |
Of course they exist. That’s what my housekeeper works. That’s what I work. That’s what my admin works. But you don’t really want any of these jobs. You don’t want to be anyone’s housekeeper or administrative assistant, but you don’t want the stress of running the show either. You want a job that isn’t actually a lot of work, that doesn’t require a ton of training, that is extremely flexible if you want time off for five weeks of vacation, that is personally fulfilling, and that sounds good to your friends. This is what doesn’t exist. It isn’t the hours. |