Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering how GenZ is shaping out, I would reserve crowing about it.
Oh, and you are the DAD? Who did pickups and drop offs, or took to the 430 gymnastics class twice a week?
I’m guessing you dropped them off at 830 and went to work, and coached soccer once a week. Your DW did all the pickup and afternoon activities 4x a week which is career nightmare fuel.
I'm one of the moms that worked full time, did the sports/activities pickups, doc appointments etc. It's not hard.
So you had a full time job that allows you to be home picking up kids at 430? And you advanced to a $200k+ professional career?
DP but I'm one of these moms too. There was this amazing thing called aftercare. Pick up kids from aftercare and take them straight to practice. You sound lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering how GenZ is shaping out, I would reserve crowing about it.
Oh, and you are the DAD? Who did pickups and drop offs, or took to the 430 gymnastics class twice a week?
I’m guessing you dropped them off at 830 and went to work, and coached soccer once a week. Your DW did all the pickup and afternoon activities 4x a week which is career nightmare fuel.
I'm one of the moms that worked full time, did the sports/activities pickups, doc appointments etc. It's not hard.
So you had a full time job that allows you to be home picking up kids at 430? And you advanced to a $200k+ professional career?
Anonymous wrote:Gen X is really shaping up to be the new boomers, eh?
Let's see you survive, pre-gramps...
Rent: $2572/mo
Utilities: $350 (water, power, trash, internet)
Health insurance: $416/mo (is the half we pay & company pays other half)
Eye insurance: $50/mo ($25 ea for both me & hubby - kid is covered under health insurance)
Dental insurance: $44/mo ($22 eas for both me & hubby - kid is covered under health insurance)
Car 1: $0 - paid off
Car 1 insurance: $40/mo
Car 2: $216/mo but paying $400/mo so it will be paid off by July
Car 2 insurance: $65/mo
Student loan 1: $683/mo
Student loan 2: $515/mo
Daycare for 18 mo: $1314/mo
=$6096
And that doesn't even include groceries, tolls/gas/car expenses, personal care items, or other monthly expenses.
And yes, we've been trying to buy a house for 3 years now. We keep getting outbid, like, $50k-$70k outbid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering how GenZ is shaping out, I would reserve crowing about it.
Oh, and you are the DAD? Who did pickups and drop offs, or took to the 430 gymnastics class twice a week?
I’m guessing you dropped them off at 830 and went to work, and coached soccer once a week. Your DW did all the pickup and afternoon activities 4x a week which is career nightmare fuel.
I'm one of the moms that worked full time, did the sports/activities pickups, doc appointments etc. It's not hard.
Anonymous wrote:Why is this in the relationships forum?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just a few years younger than you are. When my kids were little, my husband’s work more or less expected that I would handle everything at home, and he would be available at work. (It didn’t matter that I also worked for the same hospital and knew is boss and coworkers.)
My sister is 35, and things are so different. Her husband does close to half, and that’s what’s expected. He took paternity leave when the kids were born, takes time off when they are sick half the time, goes to the doctor with them half the time, etc.
As a working woman, I think this is good.
I'm 45 with the same set up as your sister. My husband does more doctor and dentist appointments than I do, he does half the work around the house, and he takes them to their sports half the time. He also gets them ready for school and puts them to bed half the time. Same with cooking. We alternate days on this stuff so I know he actually is doing half, it's not something I'm trying to convince myself of. He also took the first four weeks off, then another four after I went back to work after 16 weeks. He dealt with kids in the morning because my commute was worse so I left before they got up and I got home earlier in the afternoons so we each had them alone for the same amount of time M-F and neither of us has ever worked weekends. Now they're older and take the bus to and from school and we both work from home so things are much easier, but he has always been 50% responsible for everything related to the family.
It sounds like you were older when you had your kids and rather than being the parent of older teens, you are more in the millennial group that the OP is complaining about. You and your husband both take time off, won’t work weekends ever, come in late after dropping kids off, leave early for daycare pickup and to make dinner, etc.
I said our kids take the bus to and from school, so there are no daycare drop offs or pick ups. Before they were in school we had a full-time nanny.
We take the time off we are provided with PTO (and not all of it at that). We generally take a week at Spring break, a week at Thanksgiving, two weeks at Christmas (our two firms are actually both closed for over a week then anyway) and then a day off here and there for other things. We've never gone into negative PTO and actually have a lot of leave saved up because we don't use it all.
We don't work weekends because we get our work done during the week. There have been exceptions, generally for trials when I did litigation, but now we prioritize starting our days earlier so that we can get everything done and not need to work on the weekend. We have "real" jobs, with billable hours and other requirements, but we also push back on ridiculous expectations. I'm not going to answer your 11 pm email immediately. You can get a response during working hours. My husband is going to take paternity leave because he is equally as responsible for our children. We've never had problems getting promoted, being liked, earning bonuses, etc. Our HHI is $500K so we're not millionaires but we're not not rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 46 and my husband is 44 so theoretically we span generations depending where you make the cut.
For our first child (born in 2012), we put our names on 11 DC area waitlists for childcare as soon as I found out I was pregnant. Only because the childcare at my office was lottery based did we get into that. Most childcares I never heard from or we were accepted well after her first birthday. So I was very lucky to be able to commute with her. Also we could spend the $80-100 per application and I could take 5 months (4 unpaid) staying home because that’s when the childcare became availabile.
When she was 2 we moved to CA for a new job for DH. I worked mostly from home so we found childcare near DH’s new office. We flew to CA, took a few days visiting daycares and applying, paid a deposit for one, and then lost our deposit when our preferred daycare (next to DH’s new office and had infant care too) opened. When our 2nd child was born both girls went there.
When the pandemic hit our younger daughter had just turned 3. Her daycare initially closed entirely and then opened to certain people (such as children of first responders). As she approached her 4th birthday we were offered a spot, but they couldn’t accommodate her needs (she had some delays such as needing speech therapy and they said she’d be put in the two year old classroom). It took us another 3 months to find a daycare that could offer us a slot, and that slot was available two months later. It was in our neighborhood, which was great, but had lost a large number of staff and as a result had gone from being open 7-6 to being open 8:30-5. Our prior daycares made similar changes.
My husband and I both work from home - his company doesn’t have a physical headquarters but they do have retreats a few times a year. I go to the office once a month or so. Our girls are now in school but if we were recalled to offices and had to mange daycare 8:30-5 as well as commutes I have no idea how we’d do it. And we each spent a few years commuting with babies and / or toddlers so it’s not that. We’d figure it out, but if we had to spend hundreds on waitlists and leave a daycare we were happy with we’d complain too!
For what it’s worth, having your first kid at 34 basically places you in the Millenial parent cohort. You definitely are in thick of it. But you may have had cheaper housing, and it sounds like your DH makes fairly big money.
Anonymous wrote:Gen X is really shaping up to be the new boomers, eh?
Let's see you survive, pre-gramps...
Rent: $2572/mo
Utilities: $350 (water, power, trash, internet)
Health insurance: $416/mo (is the half we pay & company pays other half)
Eye insurance: $50/mo ($25 ea for both me & hubby - kid is covered under health insurance)
Dental insurance: $44/mo ($22 eas for both me & hubby - kid is covered under health insurance)
Car 1: $0 - paid off
Car 1 insurance: $40/mo
Car 2: $216/mo but paying $400/mo so it will be paid off by July
Car 2 insurance: $65/mo
Student loan 1: $683/mo
Student loan 2: $515/mo
Daycare for 18 mo: $1314/mo
=$6096
And that doesn't even include groceries, tolls/gas/car expenses, personal care items, or other monthly expenses.
And yes, we've been trying to buy a house for 3 years now. We keep getting outbid, like, $50k-$70k outbid.
Anonymous wrote:Considering how GenZ is shaping out, I would reserve crowing about it.
Oh, and you are the DAD? Who did pickups and drop offs, or took to the 430 gymnastics class twice a week?
I’m guessing you dropped them off at 830 and went to work, and coached soccer once a week. Your DW did all the pickup and afternoon activities 4x a week which is career nightmare fuel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, are you married? Did your partner work full time out of the house? What childcare did you use for your kids, and can you quickly check if it's still open? Relevant to the discussion.
FWIW, I'm 45 and have WFH (hybrid) since my early 30s: a lot of our generation actually did use WFH to make our childcare work. Mostly not the dudes, though.
As a family we decided to raise our kids with my wife staying at home until the youngest was 13 then she joined the work force with me. We are a very traditional household where in the husband provides and the wife nurtures. We are a team just as the QB does not try to block a DE...we stay in our lanes and do what we do best. Wife cooks cleans, I cut fire wood, fix appliances, cut grass, we both share with the kids.
The point I was trying to make earlier is not that I am magical, its that my co-workers right now think they are entitled to live a lifestyle of luxury and its someone else's problem that they need day care, or mortgage rates are high, or housing costs are high, yeah no crap dum dum...I got to buy a house in 2007 at 350K watch its value go down to 150K get trapped in a mortgage, raising 2 kids, and be the only income feeling as if I was stuck....but I worked hard and somehow both myself and family survived and now I hear people younger than me cry about how hard it is to buy a house, and how lucky I am....no I put in hard work for 17 years and now I am in a better position to handle the challenges of 2025, because of the hard work I did for the last 17.
Here is an idea, go get some friends and rent a 4 BR apt for $3,000 and boom you now have a rent of 750...figure it out, stop crying life is hard and expensive....its hard and expensive for everyone...get a clue
and yeah I was trying to stir some stuff up...but that's what message boards are for...I may have mis spoke and my co-workers I am talking about may be GEN Z...21-28 yo whatever they are![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just a few years younger than you are. When my kids were little, my husband’s work more or less expected that I would handle everything at home, and he would be available at work. (It didn’t matter that I also worked for the same hospital and knew is boss and coworkers.)
My sister is 35, and things are so different. Her husband does close to half, and that’s what’s expected. He took paternity leave when the kids were born, takes time off when they are sick half the time, goes to the doctor with them half the time, etc.
As a working woman, I think this is good.
I'm 45 with the same set up as your sister. My husband does more doctor and dentist appointments than I do, he does half the work around the house, and he takes them to their sports half the time. He also gets them ready for school and puts them to bed half the time. Same with cooking. We alternate days on this stuff so I know he actually is doing half, it's not something I'm trying to convince myself of. He also took the first four weeks off, then another four after I went back to work after 16 weeks. He dealt with kids in the morning because my commute was worse so I left before they got up and I got home earlier in the afternoons so we each had them alone for the same amount of time M-F and neither of us has ever worked weekends. Now they're older and take the bus to and from school and we both work from home so things are much easier, but he has always been 50% responsible for everything related to the family.
It sounds like you were older when you had your kids and rather than being the parent of older teens, you are more in the millennial group that the OP is complaining about. You and your husband both take time off, won’t work weekends ever, come in late after dropping kids off, leave early for daycare pickup and to make dinner, etc.