Anonymous wrote:I'll offer a differing perspective. I decided (for all the reasons you outline in your OP) to stay put while I ttc'd and was pregnant, with the intention of finding a job after I was back to my normal self after having DD. Well, I'm 6 months postpartum now and I'm so tired and run ragged, looking for a new job is nowhere near being a priority for me. My job still sucks, I'm still massively underpaid, but I'll be damned if I can find the energy to go job hunting right now. I wish I'd looked for a new job before DD arrived when I had time and energy to pursue it.
Plenty of employers will negotiate allowing you to take 12 weeks off after the birth of a child (even if it's unpaid) during the hiring process, even if you don't qualify for FMLA due to being there less than a year.
Anonymous wrote:I'll offer a differing perspective. I decided (for all the reasons you outline in your OP) to stay put while I ttc'd and was pregnant, with the intention of finding a job after I was back to my normal self after having DD. Well, I'm 6 months postpartum now and I'm so tired and run ragged, looking for a new job is nowhere near being a priority for me. My job still sucks, I'm still massively underpaid, but I'll be damned if I can find the energy to go job hunting right now. I wish I'd looked for a new job before DD arrived when I had time and energy to pursue it.
Plenty of employers will negotiate allowing you to take 12 weeks off after the birth of a child (even if it's unpaid) during the hiring process, even if you don't qualify for FMLA due to being there less than a year.
Anonymous wrote:I'll offer a differing perspective. I decided (for all the reasons you outline in your OP) to stay put while I ttc'd and was pregnant, with the intention of finding a job after I was back to my normal self after having DD. Well, I'm 6 months postpartum now and I'm so tired and run ragged, looking for a new job is nowhere near being a priority for me. My job still sucks, I'm still massively underpaid, but I'll be damned if I can find the energy to go job hunting right now. I wish I'd looked for a new job before DD arrived when I had time and energy to pursue it.
Plenty of employers will negotiate allowing you to take 12 weeks off after the birth of a child (even if it's unpaid) during the hiring process, even if you don't qualify for FMLA due to being there less than a year.
Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to stay at my current job until after my first kid because we have an insanely generous maternity policy -- 4.5 months or 5 months if you have a c-section. So for me that's a huge bonus over any other place I could look to work right now. I'm not sure that in your case it makes such a difference -- they have to give you the time off but you aren't sure if they'll be grudging about it or fine with it (and you say that your current boss already grumbles but grants leave. I don't see how the next place could be any worse, in that case?).
They have to let you pump, and I don't think it makes sense to worry that a bigger agency won't have sane maternity policies in place, including pumping. The supervisor likes you and invited you to apply, so you're already in a better position than most job applicants when it comes to negotiating at hiring if you're on the edge of the 6-month no-leave zone.
You say you have anxiety and I think it's showing in your reasoning here -- there's no real downside to applying for the better/ better-paying job. Start TTC and keep applying for better jobs.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who recently started a new job and started TTC-ing, I can say that I wish I had stayed at my old job. The maternity leave is not as generous at the new place and honestly, the job isn't as described. It's been a really awful transition and I was at a pretty stressful job before, so I thought, how much worse can it get. Newsflash, it can always be worse. TTCing is no joke and having some stability will serve you well.