Anonymous wrote:Just found out that a colleague of mine got a big promotion, which I was competitive for until about a year ago, when my one of my DCs started getting sick regularly (chronic illness) and I started missing a lot of work and not being as reliable (lots of doctor's appointments, lots of sick days with little notice). I still get all my work done, and have good performance reviews, but supervisor makes jokes about my kids being healthy.
Both of us (me and my colleague) have a DH with a demanding career and long hours, both of us have young children (although I have 2 DCs and she only has 1), so it is not simply about having children vs. not having children or having a spouse with easy hours vs long hours. My colleague definitely puts more into her work than I do (not raw hours, but is willing to travel several times per month and with little notice, needs fewer sick days for her child, pays for lots of extra childcare), so I am not complaining about her getting a promotion, but still feeling sad.
I am at peace with my daily decisions to put less in at work to be there more for my kids, but when I see others pulling ahead career-wise, I do feel some regret. I put so much into my education and career before I had kids, and while I don't feel like my education was a waste (education is never a waste), it does feel like there was no point to working really hard for a few years to get ahead in my career, only to mommy-track myself later.
No questions, just venting and feeling sad.
Anonymous wrote:It will be so great when the workplace finally acknowledges the reality that workers have lives outside of work.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.
"Mid seven figures"![]()
Was he "on track" to be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.
What even qualifies as 'mid 7 figures' ? 5 million? v. what? At that point you are sounding a little greedy.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were talking about this the other night. He daddy tracked himself. His general career path would have brought him a mid 7 figure income and prestige, but a lot of time away from the family and a lot of stress. When the time came for him to make the choice, he chose family. Not something he's regretted, but he ran into an old friend from high school who was in the same career path as dh and chose the alternate path. Very different lives and DH couldn't help but reflect on how things would be different.