I’m married to an anesthesiologist, and I agree with all of this. Also, I don’t know if she is still writing it, but there is a great blog called the underwear drawer written by an anesthesiologist mom. |
Then date someone else who fits the bill? I’m not understanding the question here. |
| My BIL is a surgeon and his wife was a stay at home mom when their kids were little and then took a job at the kid's school once they were middle and high school aged. He basically had no idea how his household was run because he just didn't see it. He had no idea where his clothes or groceries came from because for him they just showed up. He was always at work and his wife took care of everything so they could have fun family time when he wasn't working. With regard to holidays he was lucky because his partner is Jewish and was always happy to work Christmas. They then traded off Thanksgiving/NYE. It was always a bit of a question mark about if and when they would show up for family events. They always made it but occasionally showed up late at night or a day after everyone else because of his schedule. Its not a life I would have been happy with but they seemed to make it work. |
| What do you do in healthcare, OP? I’m surprised that you’re surprised that people get sick or have accidents and need emergency surgeries evenings, weekends, and holidays. |
I feel maybe this was a troll post. Someone who works in healthcare should have figured out if they can deal with a doctor by now. |
Same here. Op you are oddly fixated on holidays IMO. Not that big of a deal. I’ve been with my husband through residency (we had several kids during residency) and being married to a staff dr is pretty smooth sailing compared to that. Don’t make a problem where there is none. |
| In my twenties, I cooled things off with a guy I otherwise really liked because he was in his residency to be a doctor. I was apprehensive about having to go wherever he got a job, the hours etc. all’s well that ends well and it didn’t change the course of my life, but in hindsight, it was really stupid to discount a smart, ambitious person who I clicked with on account of what I feared might happen. You should date him if you like him. |
| He could move to a surgery center for more regular hours. Plus it's probably the more senior people that get the better schedules. |
Then this isn't the man for you. My dad was a doctor with his own private practice, so he had steady M-F hours, but constantly had to be available for emergencies. He really wanted my mom to be a SAHM, but she refused and kept her health care job with no flexibility even though he was a very high earner and we didn't need her salary. The result was absentee parents with a nanny who worked lots of hours. I remember my mom getting angry if any of us got sick, because she had to be at work before the nanny was due to show up and it was a given that my dad couldn't stay home with us. These people saying oh just get a great nanny don't understand how awful it is for the kids. I mommy tracked myself because I couldn't do that to my kids. I see these parents with dual important careers who hire nannies even when kids are elementary age, and the kids are almost always really messed up. Kids are supposed to be a priority, and you can't just live your life as if you didn't have them. OP, you need the maturity to put kids before anything else. If you're dead set on keeping a career without the flexibility to work from home or stay home with sick kids, then you need a husband who can provide that flexibility. Break up now. |
I’m a doctor married to a doctor, and unless you are talking about actual senior citizens, who of course are given fewer calls and night shifts, this just isn’t true. If anything, more senior people take on the worst shifts themselves and are the ones called to show up when someone calls off at the last minute. |
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I think my biggest concern is that you are very mindful of equity and partnership in your relationship and valuing that as how you want it to be and that's fine. But for some professions like medicine, there is no true equal negotiation like the pp said. His work and patients will need to come first as a given. The couple, until he can better choose, works around the work, not the other way around. Sure, you can add help to modify the inequity and maybe he will get more flexibility. But i think on some level you sense you and your potential children will not typically come first. Patients and the work will basically be "the other woman" sometimes. You have to decide if you can do a reframe and accept the nature of his work. No one can know this but you.
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No matter, anesthesiologists have set hours and shifts. He isn’t getting called back to work an hour after his gets home because a patient needs to go back to the OR. He isn’t getting called at 2am for an emergency (unless he is in on call). He is not a surgeon. All in all, he will have a pretty good schedule. |
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The hours depend on the specialty and where he will practice.
I know two doctor families so you don't have to be a sahm if that's not what you want, you will likely need a nanny to fill in the gaps. It also depends on him. I know doctors who though busy are committed family men and prioritize that time when they have it. I also know doctors whose wives think they are working the holidays or have been called in or working late and they are not. |
He didn't get to where he is by having this mindset He's not wired that way. You are entitled to your preferences. There is no reasonable way for him to accommodate, nor should he accommodate, your preference. |
Then he shouldn't be a husband and a father. Isn't that what we tell women who pick time consuming careers? If he wants a family he needs to make more family friendly career choices. |