Anonymous wrote:I gave up a good career to stay home. I might get back to it one day but no regrets so far. I will say that when you meet kids, it’s obvious which ones have a parent at home. People don’t like to hear it but it’s true. Once, I met some really good kids and was so confused because I heard their mom had a career but then I found out that the dad is at home with them.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up a good career to stay home. I might get back to it one day but no regrets so far. I will say that when you meet kids, it’s obvious which ones have a parent at home. People don’t like to hear it but it’s true. Once, I met some really good kids and was so confused because I heard their mom had a career but then I found out that the dad is at home with them.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should set boundaries. You are not. As long as you are working during ordinary working hours, and working an ordinary, at leas, 40 hour week -- YOU establish when you are available and when you are not. Let 'em fire you if they don't like it. You may as well try rather than quit. Do the job the way you feel is reasonable.
I wouldn't announce this at work. Just do it. Just start being *not* available when you are being taken advantage of.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up a good career to stay home. I might get back to it one day but no regrets so far. I will say that when you meet kids, it’s obvious which ones have a parent at home. People don’t like to hear it but it’s true. Once, I met some really good kids and was so confused because I heard their mom had a career but then I found out that the dad is at home with them.
Anonymous wrote:I left biglaw to stay home with my kids and I am so grateful I had that opportunity. Went back to work many, many years later to a job that is fine but not great. Still zero regrets. But it has to work for your personality.
Also search DCUM - there are many threads with the same question.