Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've no regret at all, it worked wonders for whole family's mental health. Only issue is that society stops seeing your worth so if that matters to you, reconsider. If not and you feel secure in your marriage and finances, go for it.
And if you work as you need the money not because you wan to then society feels your husband is a dead beat
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've no regret at all, it worked wonders for whole family's mental health. Only issue is that society stops seeing your worth so if that matters to you, reconsider. If not and you feel secure in your marriage and finances, go for it.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I've no regret at all, it worked wonders for whole family's mental health. Only issue is that society stops seeing your worth so if that matters to you, reconsider. If not and you feel secure in your marriage and finances, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:I've no regret at all, it worked wonders for whole family's mental health. Only issue is that society stops seeing your worth so if that matters to you, reconsider. If not and you feel secure in your marriage and finances, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Was it worth it? regrets? Did you have a fairly easy time getting back into a job in the area?
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Few physicians I know, had to go into research or academia because it was tough to get back into clinical practice.
There are so many places in the country that need more physicians! They should move to one of those places when they are ready to get back into the workforce.
Presumably, they have a spouse that is also working (and maybe that spouse's job needs to be in specific areas, or isn't needed in these areas that need physicians.)
Also, if your kids are already settled in schools and with friends, it's hard to move them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Few physicians I know, had to go into research or academia because it was tough to get back into clinical practice.
Why? If they completed the required training and practiced clinical medicine before, it shouldn’t be hard to get back into it after staying a home for a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Was it worth it? regrets? Did you have a fairly easy time getting back into a job in the area?
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:You won't regret it.
Your kids are the most amazing thing you will ever create.
Trust me, that once they are teens and young adults leaving home, you will look back not regret one moment you put them first.
I have never met a mom who looked at her adult children and wished that she had spent more time at her job and less time with her kids.
If you are able to tighten the family budget to spend a few precious years with them while they are young, either as a full time stay at home mom, or through a part time or flexible gig job, do it. It might be hard in the moment, but you won't regret it looking backwards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Few physicians I know, had to go into research or academia because it was tough to get back into clinical practice.
There are so many places in the country that need more physicians! They should move to one of those places when they are ready to get back into the workforce.