Good for you. Always regretted not pursuing an MLS. But am at the point where I personally can't spend any more on my education. |
sigh…your way is not the only way. You sound very small minded. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Get a job. This will not make you happy long term. And encourage your spouse to get a more family friendly job once you're working. It's his child too - not just your responsibility.[/quote]
She has a job. A very hard one. OP, it is a stage. It gets better [/quote] Agree with you. And who ARE these people who think getting a job is the answer, anyway? You're exhausted and bored as a SAHM? I have an idea. Get a job! That will solve it! Here's what will help: Get up at 5 a.m., pump, make bottles, pack a bag, then get yourself dressed and go fight traffic to sit in an office and deal with demanding clients/ coworkers for 9 hours, fight traffic again, race to get baby from daycare before the dreaded dollar a minute penalty kicks in, come home, start Job number 2. Cook dinner, clean house, get laundry done, wash bottles, try to find 15 minutes to see said baby and husband. And...REPEAT. Until Dead! [/quote] +1000[/quote] I was in OPs shoes and getting a job was the answer and NOTHING like you all describe. It was a miserable 2 years. Tennis and mom gossip was not for me. It was mind numbingly boing. Now with two salaries my DH was able to make a career change and is not an active partner in raising our children. I don't know what kind od miserable lives you lead, but I hope you strike a balance one day.[/quote] I find it kind of sad that many view working as the only option to "mind numbing" boredom and hanging out with idiots in tennis whites all day. Personally, I'm fulfilled by enriching my mind, pursuing my own interests and caring for my children. If your stay-at-home years were defined by mom gossip and tennis, that says more about you and your poor choices, not about being a full-time mother. [/quote] What exactly enriches your mind? What are your interests? And depending on a man for money doesn't make you more of a full- time mother than a working mom. When your kids go to school do you drop to part time mom? |
This says everything I need to know about you and your small little world. |
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I don't understand all of you people who are saying get a job, that crafting books and trips to the library are mind-numbingly boring and awful.
SOMEONE has to spend their day with a baby/child, don't they? If it isn't a parent, it's someone you're paying to do it, right? Do you think that person is mind-numbingly bored? If you can't imagine your life having any meaning or interest without your job, you really probably shouldn't have become a parent (not talking to you, OP, talking to these other people who think the only way to be happy is to have a job while you also have kids). And by the way, I have never been a stay at home parent, I work full time in a demanding career and bring in $200k+ annually. But the narrow-mindedness of people who think that getting a job must be the answer is really crazy. OP has a child and it doesn't make sense for her family for her to work. That is pretty clear. She can find a way to make life more interesting and fun and meaningful without getting a job and having to pretend to be superwoman, doing it all, the lion's share of the child/house work and a paying job as well. |
No stupid stop "wasting time at home and go back to enslave yourself at your job" Stupid
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Not everyone is built the same. Of course a nanny does not think her job is boring. I would never be a nanny, it would bore me to death. I would also never be a librarian or an accountant. However, I don't do the lions share of the housework or childcare. My kids are in school and I have a housekeeper. Plus I have a DH who parents his kids. Apparently an engaged father is some sort of luxury-sad. |
Actually, I posted the above. And I work. Am assuming that you feel slighted by the semantics? "Full-time mother?" Clearly you assume my "small little world" is that of a stay at home mother. Nope. I work, but have always been envious of stay-at-home AKA full-time moms. And I feel like the people shitting on them -- saying how boring it is -- have an ax to grind. And I also feel sad for them that they can't appreciate what a GIFT it is. I don't live to work. I work to live. And unfortunately, I HAVE to work for us to live. If I didn't have to, I would be home with my kids. And I think it sucks when people disparage women who've made the choice/or had the ability to make the choice to put their children first. Kids benefit when moms are home. I know my kids would be better off if I were the one there for them all day and I think it sucks that I can't be there. At least I can be honest about that. |
| If you can't handle one infant do yourself and the infant a favor, give your infant up for adoption. Then go get your tubes tied. |
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I've a SAHM for 4 years now (two DCs) and felt a bit like you do this year. My awesome DH suggested that I need 'something that was just my own.' For me, this meant getting a very part time job. What would that be for you? Part time job? Running a marathon? Learning a new language? You need to find a goal, a way to feel productive outside your role as a mother.
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Look, you clearly had a child, at least in part, so you could escape work. Now, the bloom is off the rose, but you don't want to work, because, well, it's BORING. Wah wah wah. |
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I sympathize, OP. I had a hard time staying home with one. I got a fun, very part time job, volunteered 1 day a month on the weekends, and tried to get out of the house as much as possible.
I know this may sound crazy, but if going back to work is not realistic, have you considered having another baby? You are already in baby mode and in a year or two they will occupy one another. Plus, for me, the pregnancy hormones made me feel really happy. Good luck! |
OP, I've been where you are. We moved to a new area, I was newly SAH, and I was dying to make some great mom friends. I signed up for a music class, a tumbles class, and tried really hard to cultivate relationships with moms I chatted with on the playground. Some of it worked, a little bit, but mostly I ended up either getting blown off or spending time with women I didn't actually have much in common with. Now that I'm a few years past it I look back and realize that I was thinking of it all wrong. Making friends isn't a goal-oriented process. Think of the friends you have from other parts of your life -- you didn't set out to meet them, make a plan, and then find them. It happened naturally, as a result of repeated exposure over time (usually school, work, neighbors, etc.) You are smart to sign up for a class but even then, it's only going to be one hour a week for 8 weeks or whatever, so it will take time. The key is seeing the same people over and over. This can be as simple as having a routine of going ot the same playground at the same time every Wednesday, and sooner or later you start to see the same people. I didn't read all the posts but is there any way you can find a playgroup? That is honestly where I really started to find people I considered friends, and even then it took several months of weekly meetings. What about joining a gym (with childcare) and going to the same classes week after week? If you go to, for example, a 10 a.m. spin class, you can bet there will be mostly SAHMs there. A friend of mine made great friends through one of those stroller-exercise groups. What about joining a church or temple? They may have a mom's group or playgroup that you can become part of, and you already know you have at least one thing in common with the other moms. To be perfectly honest, the way I really met my "group" of mom friends was when my oldest child started preschool at age 2.5. It was only a couple of mornings a week, but there was a lot of socializing out of school and it was enough contact for a few of us us to get to know each other pretty well. Even then, I think it was January or February of the school year before I was seeing any of them on a regular basis, and it wasn't until the following summer that I felt really close with any of them. BUt now it's over two years later and they are still some of my closest friends. I do Music Together with my little one and I see the earnest FTMs trying to reach out and make friends and sometimes I will exchange numbers and I really intend to get togehter, but life is crazy with two and I already have a bunch of friends to keep me busy, and that's what happens. It will happen to you too. Give it TIME. |
OP here. Thanks for your thoughts. They are encouraging and you really helped explain how it makes sense how you met your closer friends through preschool. I had really high hopes for the mom groups, but you're right, I was really only seeing the same people a few times per month and I guess that's not enough to form friendships. However, making friends has been a goal-oriented process for me in the past--because we have moved a lot. So since I never returned to my hometown, and since I went to college and grad school in different states (and I've lived in 5 different states since college), I had to make finding friends a goal-oriented process otherwise it never would have happened (especially as a married woman without kids). I met my husband through online dating, so that was a goal-oriented process too. Anyhow, I appreciated reading about your experiences and I know making friends takes time, but in the meantime it's super lonely! While you were waiting to make friendships, how did you avoid being lonely all the time? I just feel so incredibly alone, especially since my husband works so much and we have no family anywhere near here. |
+1 Everything seems impossible when you've been overtired for a year. So #1, hard as it is, IMO, is to work on getting baby to sleep through the night. Then, exercise -- see if there's a Stroller Strides in your area. My kids are 10 and 11 and I'm still friends with moms I met through that. Also, look for a preschool with a parents-day-out option for next Fall. My kids did that for 1 morning a week starting at 1 yr old and then continued at that preschool for 2 days/week at 2yr and 3 days/week at 3-4 yrs old. Preschool will also help you meet other SAHMs with kids the same age and you'll find you can get as involved as you may want to in volunteering. |