Anonymous wrote:No, but I also stayed in a very flexible position that let me (very fortunately) set my own hours, work from home occasionally, etc.
That said, not always being available to your kids is a good thing too. Mine learned a lot of independence when they had to figure it out.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why more parents don't do this. It makes no sense to stay home with the kids when they're young and go back to work once the kids are old enough to be home alone. It's when they're old enough to be home alone that they can get in the most mischief!
Everything I did bad in HS went down after school at a house where parents weren't home because they were working.
DW gets off work at 2:00 so she's always been home with the kids after school.
Anonymous wrote:No, but I also stayed in a very flexible position that let me (very fortunately) set my own hours, work from home occasionally, etc.
That said, not always being available to your kids is a good thing too. Mine learned a lot of independence when they had to figure it out.
Anonymous wrote:Our society has it reversed. Kids need a parent at home more in middle and high school than pre/elem. BTDT.
Anonymous wrote:Man, I swear the tween/teen years are more work than the baby/infant years from the perspective that you can't really just hire a nanny. As a parent, that's when you actually have to step up and parent cause your kids know who you are. So you are the one who has to carpool, spend the time with them, talk with them, it's time over money because it's totally relationship based v. when they don't really know you, it's transactional keeping them alive physically! LOL
I have taken the last year off with a 13 and 15 year old, one of whom has a learning disability with both in private school. It's definitely not like I've just had a ton of free time and boredom on my hands. It's work to be a parent. I don't get the American culture that doesn't realize how much responsibility comes with raising human beings.
Anonymous wrote:Man, I swear the tween/teen years are more work than the baby/infant years from the perspective that you can't really just hire a nanny. As a parent, that's when you actually have to step up and parent cause your kids know who you are. So you are the one who has to carpool, spend the time with them, talk with them, it's time over money because it's totally relationship based v. when they don't really know you, it's transactional keeping them alive physically! LOL
I have taken the last year off with a 13 and 15 year old, one of whom has a learning disability with both in private school. It's definitely not like I've just had a ton of free time and boredom on my hands. It's work to be a parent. I don't get the American culture that doesn't realize how much responsibility comes with raising human beings.