Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
This. None of the children need full time care at this point.
The hours kids are in school are not enough to allow for a full time job (6 hours a day) even if you could teleport to your work computer right as they get on the bus. You would have to do aftercare and/or rely on spouse to help out. And feeding and cleaning a big house and handling family business could easily take up that time. It’s not my thing I’d rather outsource that but it’s absurd to say there’s not enough work to do in the home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think hard about whether you are willing to give up your career. Can you go part time?
The nanny isn’t that much on your husband’s salary.
If you quit and don’t have to pay the nanny, I bet your household finances change by about $1500 a month. It’s immaterial.
If nanny was "full-time" like OP stated, at $25/hr and 40 hour weeks that is $1K/week, so $4K/month. Not "immaterial"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think hard about whether you are willing to give up your career. Can you go part time?
The nanny isn’t that much on your husband’s salary.
If you quit and don’t have to pay the nanny, I bet your household finances change by about $1500 a month. It’s immaterial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
This. The normal progression is stay at home from birth through Kindergarten, then start some sort of work again when kids are in school. You don't wait until the hard part is done and then decide to stay at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
This. None of the children need full time care at this point.
The hours kids are in school are not enough to allow for a full time job (6 hours a day) even if you could teleport to your work computer right as they get on the bus. You would have to do aftercare and/or rely on spouse to help out. And feeding and cleaning a big house and handling family business could easily take up that time. It’s not my thing I’d rather outsource that but it’s absurd to say there’s not enough work to do in the home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
This. None of the children need full time care at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
This. The normal progression is stay at home from birth through Kindergarten, then start some sort of work again when kids are in school. You don't wait until the hard part is done and then decide to stay at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg. Your husband makes so much. I would do it in a heartbeat.
But she doesn’t actually want to be a SAHM, if so, she could have done it all along. She wants to be a lady of leisure now that both her kids will be in full time school. I know exactly the type.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve thought about going part time. I probably could. I’m honestly at the point where it just feels like I have no connection to my job—I feel like I’m leaning out, not in, and so much of my mental focus is on my kids and the household…but I hear you about the huge decision of giving up my career.
Anonymous wrote:Think hard about whether you are willing to give up your career. Can you go part time?
The nanny isn’t that much on your husband’s salary.