Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH gave up his career due to our son's disabilities. It was in stages - first PT then quickly became a SAHD.
This was the only way we could make everything work during the years when our oldest needed intensive therapies outside of school (4 days a week) and also take care of his younger brother. And it's been a luxury to be able to have them have a parent home all these years.
But the cost to his career and self-esteem was huge. The irony is our child is now fine. Entering high school with minor supports - the early intervention poster child, if you will.
My husband OTOH has not yet found his way back to full time work and I doubt he will. Just too many gaps in his employment history. We'd do it again but cost was high.
This is us, except DH works and I am at home and we have two children that needed the early interventions. We to wold do it all again, but the thought of re-entering the workplace after 14 years is daunting. Plus, it always seems that when I start the beginnings of going back to work, another anvil drops from the sky and I have to put the search on hold again.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that ^^ would make sense but of course we have prioritized his career (as the only career in our house) since I quit work to deal with our child's issues. So he feels like he needs to 'protect' his career and I agree, but I also feel like it is unrealistic to expect me to just jump back in to working life. I feel unqualified and have no professional contacts.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that ^^ would make sense but of course we have prioritized his career (as the only career in our house) since I quit work to deal with our child's issues. So he feels like he needs to 'protect' his career and I agree, but I also feel like it is unrealistic to expect me to just jump back in to working life. I feel unqualified and have no professional contacts.
Anonymous wrote:All the choices are hard IMO.
I have 3 dc and one of them has ASD and also has a mood disorder. He has been in and out of school for the past few years, and no summer camp we can afford will take him. I would love to go back to work. I go days without talking to any adults except about my son's issues. But I don't see how I can have any kind of regular employment when I can never be sure he is reliably somewhere for 8+ hours a day without being called to come pick him up.
My DH keeps talking about me going back to work when my youngest is in K and it makes me want to scream. He is convinced it will be easy to find something flexible, during school hours, with summer and holidays off and no problems with me taking off to deal with a school meltdown or go to a (very frequent) school meeting or stay home if any of the 3 are sick (after me not working for 8 years!). Ugh. I am just so frustrated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I stay home. DS 5 has HFA. It was just too much between all the therapies and trying to still excel at work. Maybe in a couple years when he is able to go to aftercare or before care I will be able to go back to work. For now, this works for us. We are super lucky that DS is at an amazing charter school and gets an aide there. Otherwise, we'd be paying tuition and for a 1 on 1 aide which would necessitate me working full time.
What charter?
Anonymous wrote:I stay home. DS 5 has HFA. It was just too much between all the therapies and trying to still excel at work. Maybe in a couple years when he is able to go to aftercare or before care I will be able to go back to work. For now, this works for us. We are super lucky that DS is at an amazing charter school and gets an aide there. Otherwise, we'd be paying tuition and for a 1 on 1 aide which would necessitate me working full time.