Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your husband cheated on you before w/the Nanny?
Because I simply cannot think of any job that would prohibit your husband from employing a Nanny.....
OP here. No. We have never had a nanny. My husband has never cheated on me. He works for the feds and doesn’t want a nanny in our home since he is on calls all day discussing things that most can’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does he not want to do daycare? Because of covid?
I don't see why you wouldn't just keep doing what you're doing then put the kids in daycare in say, May, when things are a bit better covid wise.
OP here. He doesn’t want our child in daycare because of Covid. We had in daycare in daycare before the pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have been disagreeing on what to do for childcare. A nanny is not an option due to his job. I would ideally keep my job and put our child into daycare ( pre-Covid), but he wants me to quit. We do have money saved but long term need my salary. He thinks I should quit for the next year until we have a second child, and then go back to work. I don’t want that large of a gap on my resume when we need my job. How do you come to an agreement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are either fake or have serious issues. You should not be having 5 weapons around young kids especially if your husband wears one all the time. The comments about his job make no sense like others pointed out. If he's that high up and important and talking about important information there is no way he's doing that at home over the phone or internet call. He'd have to have a secure line and special room. He isn't important and you are pretending he is. He should be making $200K and you can comfortable live off that. Plus, depending on if he's a veteran or retired, he'd also get retirement pay. With two kids, day care will probably cost more than a nanny. If you need child care, tell him to handle it while you work or do day care.
OP here. That is your opinion on guns. We have some for safety, and some because my husband hunts. All the firearms are locked away in a safe where kids can’t get to or get in.
I can’t say what his actual job is. He does make around the salary you mentioned, but we need my income for long term goals like buying a big house, fully funding college, traveling, etc. I need my income because you never know what can happen.
You need to grow up. If he's making that kind of money you can comfortably afford to buy a house, pay for child care, college fun, etc. but your priorities are messed up. You don't need your income. You want your income and that is ok. Your husband or you is making up crap about his job as everything you are saying makes zero sense or he'd be working out of an office. Enjoy your guns. They seem to be the focal point in your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are either fake or have serious issues. You should not be having 5 weapons around young kids especially if your husband wears one all the time. The comments about his job make no sense like others pointed out. If he's that high up and important and talking about important information there is no way he's doing that at home over the phone or internet call. He'd have to have a secure line and special room. He isn't important and you are pretending he is. He should be making $200K and you can comfortable live off that. Plus, depending on if he's a veteran or retired, he'd also get retirement pay. With two kids, day care will probably cost more than a nanny. If you need child care, tell him to handle it while you work or do day care.
OP here. That is your opinion on guns. We have some for safety, and some because my husband hunts. All the firearms are locked away in a safe where kids can’t get to or get in.
I can’t say what his actual job is. He does make around the salary you mentioned, but we need my income for long term goals like buying a big house, fully funding college, traveling, etc. I need my income because you never know what can happen.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are either fake or have serious issues. You should not be having 5 weapons around young kids especially if your husband wears one all the time. The comments about his job make no sense like others pointed out. If he's that high up and important and talking about important information there is no way he's doing that at home over the phone or internet call. He'd have to have a secure line and special room. He isn't important and you are pretending he is. He should be making $200K and you can comfortable live off that. Plus, depending on if he's a veteran or retired, he'd also get retirement pay. With two kids, day care will probably cost more than a nanny. If you need child care, tell him to handle it while you work or do day care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a nanny.
He can rent an office with a door at a coworking space.
Or he can stay home and shut the door.
Do not quit your job.
OP here. I also don’t like the idea of a nanny. It’s really not worth the money when daycare can do the same thing for half the price.
Anonymous wrote:OP acknowledged - the job isn't that secretive but her DH really just doesn't want another person in their home. Ding ding ding.
OP if your DH has a problem with another person in the home while he's working, his choice is: (i) deal with it; (ii) quit his job to take care of the baby; or (iii) start going into the office or rent a private workshare space (which might be comparable to a nanny cost). If he has the issue, it shouldn't be for you to have to solve it through your own, life-altering job change.
Easy!
Anonymous wrote:Get a nanny.
He can rent an office with a door at a coworking space.
Or he can stay home and shut the door.
Do not quit your job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What job does he have that he cannot have a Nanny in his home?
He should not force you to quite if you do not need to, Either find a share in someone elses home, or do daycare.
OP here. My husband works for the federal government and is on the phone all day talking about very top every information. He does not feel comfortable having someone in the home who could possibly overhead certain things. He’s not a spy or anything, but he manages a handful of programs for the government.
Spies don’t get to telework![]()
Yes but wannabe spies who are ex cops doing meaningless paper pushing "managing programs" jobs can telework in their condo and buy firearms so they can pretend they are spies.