Anonymous wrote:My income wasn’t very high - 56,000 as an academic. I liked my job, was good at it, and had spent a lot of years getting my PhD. I left 12 years ago, stepping back slowly and then eventually leaving the workforce entirely. I have regrets about not picking a higher paying profession and one that didn’t take so much schooling to be qualified to do. If I could go back, I would be a speech pathologist or an OT, or some other profession that has flexibility but only requires a Masters.
But, I also don’t regret my choice. It has worked out for me because DH is in a high paying profession (big law) and his income ceiling was always much higher than mine. He is also a wonderful person whom I love very much. We are all far richer because he has leaned in and I have leaned out. It works because we are really a team and he knows that his ability to work the way he does is built on the fact that I am taking care of basically everything else in our lives. It also allowed us to have three kids. That would have been harder if I kept working.
We met at an Ivy and I certainly didn’t expect to be a SAHM, but sometimes that solution is best for the family unit as a whole. Sometimes I hate the tedium, but I also hated some of the tedium of working.
I have a Masters but wish I had a PhD as I think I could have gone back to work easier.
To the OP - I quit in 2001 at 60k but I was in the Midwest. Probably equivalent to close to 100k on the East Coast at that time. Could have been making 500k by now, but I had health problems and then became a SAHM. I do wish I had a career but glad I was able to be home for my kids.