Anonymous wrote:You guys all know that the DHs left behind in the 95 degree heat of the city are banging the junior staffers, right?
And I say this as a wife of one such biglaw DH. My private shame.
Anyway, it's weird to separate the children from their father all summer long, don't you think? Haven't we ... evolved from 1952?
Anonymous wrote:"I have heard many stories of people doing this in the midwest lake country back in the early to mid 19th century. The father would drive up on the weekends."
Automobiles in the early to mid 19th century? Who knew?

Anonymous wrote:You guys all know that the DHs left behind in the 95 degree heat of the city are banging the junior staffers, right?
And I say this as a wife of one such biglaw DH. My private shame.
Anyway, it's weird to separate the children from their father all summer long, don't you think? Haven't we ... evolved from 1952?

Anonymous wrote:I have heard many stories of people doing this in the midwest lake country back in the early to mid 19th century. The father would drive up on the weekends. It sure sounds heavenly to me. Get to really live for a few months out of the year. I've also heard of people doing this in the Adirondacks.
But it was a simpler time when only the father worked, rentals were affordable, and kids weren't involved in so many activities and weren't so connected that they couldn't be away from their friends and their electronics for an entire time.
I think to do the same today, you'd want to be near a small town with a library and some cultural events going on. The outdoors simple life is great, but I wouldn't want to raise my kids today without also having them exposed to culture.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of people in the NY area do it. But the beaches there are closer and more accessible by public transportation than here so it's easier for the parents to commute back and forth very weekend.
Anonymous wrote:I have heard many stories of people doing this in the midwest lake country back in the early to mid 19th century. The father would drive up on the weekends. It sure sounds heavenly to me. Get to really live for a few months out of the year. I've also heard of people doing this in the Adirondacks.
But it was a simpler time when only the father worked, rentals were affordable, and kids weren't involved in so many activities and weren't so connected that they couldn't be away from their friends and their electronics for an entire time.
I think to do the same today, you'd want to be near a small town with a library and some cultural events going on. The outdoors simple life is great, but I wouldn't want to raise my kids today without also having them exposed to culture.