| DH and I worried about this too so we got a nanny. We kept her on even when DD was old enough to go to preschool in part because our lives are so much less rushed without the daycare commute, preparing a lunchbox, etc. |
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Haha 😄
You are going to be late most days So sleep deprived Never have time to workout Never see your friends Have 0 sick leave left Sick every 2 weeks Congrats and welcome to parenthood! |
Ooh parenthood is going to smack you hard in the face. No planning parenthood. I say this as a planner |
| I work from home 3x a week and my husband works out of the home. I have 2 toddlers. When I work in the office I wake up at 6 to get myself ready and prepare some quick breakfast. I then wake up the kids, get them ready, drag them to the kitchen to eat breakfast. I drop them off daycare, which is 5 minutes away, by 7. My husband picks them up around 4:30-5. I get to work by 8:30 and usually get home between 6:30-7. On days I work from home I wake up at 7:15 to make breakfast, wake them up by 7:30 to get ready and eat and have them at daycare by 8ish. Husband will pick them up on way home. |
What’s sad is that you prioritize yourself to the extent that you are thinking about your workouts etc. but you don’t prioritize your baby enough to let them stay in the comfort of their home during their early years |
Ignore this poster, op |
Hey PP, could you spend some time reflecting on how to make the world a better place? Just doing that would be a big improvement over you spewing this toxic garbage here. |
| LOL. Don’t worry about not having time to work out. You won’t have energy anyway. |
Different poster. Um, not everyone can afford to stay at home with their baby. So how is that sad? |
This! 🤣 |
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I shower at night vs morning. I prep all bottles for daycare the night before.
I wake up at 6 and get baby. I feed him and then I eat. Then we go upstairs and he chills in his crib while I finish getting ready. Then I change him for daycare and go downstairs. I finish gathering everything and we are usually out the door by 7:30 the latest. I avoid putting my top on until he is in his carseat cause spit up sucks. You will find a schedule that works. |
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Once my baby was sleeping through the night, I would wake up at 5 and pump (it was too uncomfortable to work out without pumping first), work out, and be home by the time she woke up and needed to nurse at 6:30. I worked part time so our afternoons were different, but I prioritized working out in the mornings and was also able to have the mornings with her, and my DS. We were out the door just before 8 for preschool drop off for my son (DD had a nanny, but the nanny didn’t arrive until after I got home from preschool drop-off). You just need to wake up earlier!
Before she slept through the night I prioritized sleep. |
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Plan on being sleep deprived for at least the first 2 years. Exercise will not have a firm schedule, but instead will have to be when-one-can.
Babies need to be 100% supervised, and this will not really change until maybe around age 5. Children under maybe age 7 or 8 do not understand that a parent they can see still needs to be able to work. Each family is different, but many families have one parent handle drop off and the other parent picks up from day care. Often, not always, this also means shifting work schedules, so the drop-off parent starts work later and the pickup parent starts work earlier. In many families, not all, it helps if DW creates a list of all the things which need to be done for the baby and for the house, then both DH and DW agree on who is responsible for which things and what days/times they need to be finished. This is NOT the time to micro-manage how each other gets things done; it is the time to delegate and let the other person do their tasks as they think best. |
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People in real life often cannot afford a nanny, because there just is not enough HHI. We simply could not afford one, even though we have an older non-fancy home in a tract development. And no, we do not have a fancy car or new car, we do not go on fancy vacations, we do not have investments beyond the 401(k), we do not have much savings, and we have kids in public schools.
Our situation is actually very very common, all across America, much more common than a few of the 1%ers posting here seem to grasp. |
NP, but I could afford to stay home with my baby, and I chose not to because I prefer to work. And I prioritized my health which does include regular workouts. The PP is a nasty person. Moms deserve self-care and not being a SAHP is not a moral failing. |