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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Are there ramifications for being a SAHM?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It astounds me how so few posters consider or acknowledge the experience for an infant or toddler—what their day to day is like. It’s a completely different childhood when you can avoid both parents working long hours with maybe 4 months of leave total. Anything that can be done to stagger or extend leaves, to work part time, etc. will improve your child’s quality of life immensely. [/quote] My kids liked day care. It was warm and lovely and the kids were very well taken care of. It sucked for me to be managing being a new mother, pumping, and working, but they were fine. And now that they're older, I have a lot more flexibility in my hours because of the work I put in then. So it's not that I haven't considered my kids' experience, I just don't agree with this. [/quote] DP. My kids didn’t like daycare and didn’t thrive there and I still worked because they are not the only people on the planet, and they are still incredibly privileged. I was in a small town where I was the only doctor in my specialty. I wasn’t going to SAH in order to give them some idyllic toddlerhood. My kids are a little neurotic, but they are fine, and a few people lived that might have died a lot sooner. I feel like it was a good trade. The idea that we need to give over privileged children even more time and attention is ridiculous. [/quote] It’s so nuts. This notion that kids who go to daycare or have babysitters are in any way missing out is insane. I mainly work from home and have hours and hours a day with my kids. They just do a sport or a class after school. And they’re great kids! And bc I work they will have fully funded 529s, they can go to camp, they can travel to Europe and we will be able to help them with down payment on first home. Kids generally after the age of 7 desperately start to want to see less of their parents so silly to give up your whole life and comp for someone who will pull away in a way that’s developmentally appropriate after just a few years [/quote] NP here. Listen, I am certain your choices for your family were correct for you, but you seem uber defensive. Children in daycare or with a nanny literally have a hired worker as their primary attachment in infancy and as a toddler. Think what you want of that. Also, taking your children to Europe is not the flex you think it is. Chill out nobody is judging you. Especially in DC where all the working women think they are as important as Jesus. [/quote]
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