Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are very mean. We've been married 15 years already and are planning to stay married. We met in law school, got married very young and while I never had a real career per se I worked full-time from graduating law school up until I gave birth, at various jobs (the most I ever made though was 40K per year).
I was only at my teaching career 2 years before I had my child, and decided to resign since my salary wouldn't have covered childcare costs and things would have been too stressful with DH's long hours and travel/no local family to help.
I've been a SAHM for 4 years and we save a ton that we'd have to outsource because I stay home. Besides childcare I do all the cooking and cleaning too. But all of this is besides the point. The point is that I am having a midlife crisis, and I feel like I don't really have a roadmap for my 40s, and I need a roadmap. My original plan was to be a SAHM, but secondary infertility unfortunately has ruined that dream (since I had to have a hysterectomy there is zero chance I will ever be pregnant again). I'd have to think long and hard before deciding to work full-time, it would make our lives so much more stressful. My child barely sees my husband now, and with me working full-time I think that would just be too stressful for all of us. I'd prefer something I can do part time, 10-2, and I could also work some evenings and weekends. I love the non-profit where I work and will inquire to see if there are other positions they might consider me for that are as flexible as my current job. However neither my current job nor any other jobs at this non-profit are related at all to law or to teaching/education, which bothers me. I would prefer to use one of my degrees in some capacity going forward, but I'm unsure how I could best use them. Of course I'd love to have a real career, but understand that that may not be realistic at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can relate to a lot of your post, OP. I too have a JD and have inattentive ADD. Certain things happened in my marriage which were really disappointing, and a dealt with this by focusing on my own path, which included changing careers. While I did practice for a while I changed career tracks at age 40, returning to school for a counseling degree. I'm now a therapist and love it. If teaching or counseling is your thing I say do it! I'm 55 now and don't regret the career shift for a second -- I love what I do.
OP here. Thanks for sharing your story. I didn't know I had inattantive ADD until a few years ago but it explains a lot. I'm totally fine re: ADD when I'm a SAHM/only work very part-time, but when I work full-time I can't juggle work and home responsibilities very well and feel overwhelmed. I'm not forgetful/don't lose things/am always punctual but my ADD manifests itself mainly in feeling overwhelmed. I also have difficulty with boring tasks and keeping attention focused on boring tasks. I had a lot of difficulty studying but managed to get good grades. Anyhow, now that I'm aware of my ADD I can make use of coping skills which are very helpful and work well.
Anyhow, I don't think I want to go back to school for a third degree, but I'd like to make use of the JD and/or master's in teaching if possible. I preferred the school counseling focus I was doing over teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all can't have everything in life. You've had a cushy situation for 20+ years and you never invested in yourself. Unfortunately you've traveled this far down this road, that you are right, you've wasted any sort of intellectual capacity. It's very sad that you are thinking back to grade school and high school academics as your glory days. I think it's time to accept that 20 years are gone and start making some good choices and investing in yourself. That means your partner will have to also shift his thinking.
Exactly.
OP here. This thread is one of the most mean spirited I have ever read on DCUM. Here I am recovering from my hysterectomy (which means I will never be able to have more children) which I am absolutely heartbroken about, and then I read the positively nasty comments on here when I am already at my lowest point between the hysterectomy and feeling like I'm in the middle of a midlife crisis trying to figure out a roadmap for my 40s. Newsflash: SAH and taking care of a child and a home/husband is not a waste at all. Over the past few years I have spent every minute with my child, seen every milestone, and made my home a nicer place for my family by taking care of all the housework and cooking myself. Congratulations, you have all made a heartbroken, depressed women feel even more depressed. I have never felt more depressed in my life than I have recently, and all you mean and nasty women have just made it a million times worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's all be honest here. Either because of lifetime ADD or depression, OP has never really done *anything*. She flits from thing to thing every year or so. All of us who have had longer term careers know that it takes a lot more effort to stick out a job 5-10 years than it does to do what OP has done for the last 20 years:
- 18-22: college
- 23-26: JD
- 3-4 years of jumping around low paying non-competitive sort of legal-related jobs for $40k
- 2 (?) years of doing a masters in special ed
- 2-3 years of jumping around low paying non-competitive education related jobs for $40k
- 5 years of staying home with a kid, who for the last several years has likely been in preschool. OP didn't mention anything about even doing volunteering during this time.
OP is a classic non-committed job jumper who has been enabled by her parents and husband. She has never had to pay a single bill on her own salary. She isn't going to magically turn into someone who can commit to a job, or even a volunteer role, for more than a year.
I'm usually hardcore of the position that dads need to get a grip and spend more time dealing with shit at home in order for their wives to have satisfying careers. But I agree with the person above who said that OP has been essentially doing nothing for 20 years, her DH has been paying all the bills and working hard, and now OP is going to demand that DH starts chipping in more around the house and take time off work so she can flit around other low-paying jobs for the next 5 years solely to satiate her midlife crisis? If I were the husband, I would be peeved.
OP - the best you can ask for is to keep up with your PT job and/or do some volunteering at your kid's school.
You are incredibly rude and condescending.
And a poor reader. The OP volunteers part time.
Np here. I just went through thread. At no point did OP mention she volunteers. At all. I suspect as having ADD she probably finds getting house in order and managing kid challenging enough. Kid is only in school 6 hours -- unless she was organized it would be hard to make volunteer efforts work on that short time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all can't have everything in life. You've had a cushy situation for 20+ years and you never invested in yourself. Unfortunately you've traveled this far down this road, that you are right, you've wasted any sort of intellectual capacity. It's very sad that you are thinking back to grade school and high school academics as your glory days. I think it's time to accept that 20 years are gone and start making some good choices and investing in yourself. That means your partner will have to also shift his thinking.
Exactly.
OP here. This thread is one of the most mean spirited I have ever read on DCUM. Here I am recovering from my hysterectomy (which means I will never be able to have more children) which I am absolutely heartbroken about, and then I read the positively nasty comments on here when I am already at my lowest point between the hysterectomy and feeling like I'm in the middle of a midlife crisis trying to figure out a roadmap for my 40s. Newsflash: SAH and taking care of a child and a home/husband is not a waste at all. Over the past few years I have spent every minute with my child, seen every milestone, and made my home a nicer place for my family by taking care of all the housework and cooking myself. Congratulations, you have all made a heartbroken, depressed women feel even more depressed. I have never felt more depressed in my life than I have recently, and all you mean and nasty women have just made it a million times worse.