Anonymous wrote:I am very envious of people with lots of support. The families that show up to dance recitals with grandma, grandpa, aunts, and cousins. Only in my wildest dreams. I went to my daughter’s dance recital alone.
I long for someone to share the journey with. Not so much for help but to share the joy with.
Anonymous wrote:This post is ridiculous- being a parent is a choice, and so is your career, number of kids, geographic location. The quiz demonstrated how people start the race ahead due to what was given to them as kids. Your lament is that you don’t have some of the niceties of adulthood- but those are mostly the sum of your choices! How are you going to complain about not having family nearby when you are raising kids in another city? If you want family close by, you need to move near your family. If you want a bigger salary, you have to get a job that pays more. If you want mom friends you have to make friends. If you want to outsource, you have to think of some other line item on your budget to give up. Also I’ve literally never had the dilemma you are worried about. I’m thankful people serve on the pta etc and have never once felt bad about not doing it or looked askance at people who don’t.
Anonymous wrote:I spend zero time thinking about what other moms are or are not doing. I'm not sure why the reaction to "would you like to be on the board" is "f you". How about, "thanks so much for asking, but I'm unable to do that at this time." done and done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these women who judge whether other moms host play dates or volunteer for the pta? Because I've never met any.
A preschool mom asked me the other day if I would be on the preschool board next year. “Perfect position for a stay at home mom”. F&3k you. No. I have zero help. My husband travels constantly. I have 3 kids under 8 including one with special needs. No no no.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I agree.
Some people get to play the mom video game on the easiest setting, and they get compared (or compare themselves) to people playing on the hardest level. But they aren’t equal. Money and family are the big ones, IMO. Everything else you may have at least some control over. But being born to a supportive, functional family, and having money, just eliminates entire categories of parenting stress.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I agree.
Some people get to play the mom video game on the easiest setting, and they get compared (or compare themselves) to people playing on the hardest level. But they aren’t equal. Money and family are the big ones, IMO. Everything else you may have at least some control over. But being born to a supportive, functional family, and having money, just eliminates entire categories of parenting stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these women who judge whether other moms host play dates or volunteer for the pta? Because I've never met any.
A preschool mom asked me the other day if I would be on the preschool board next year. “Perfect position for a stay at home mom”. F&3k you. No. I have zero help. My husband travels constantly. I have 3 kids under 8 including one with special needs. No no no.
Anonymous wrote:Who are these women who judge whether other moms host play dates or volunteer for the pta? Because I've never met any.