Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach yoga. Help others, bring in some income (about 20k/year, which we didn't need so is used for more extravagant vacations and extra community giving) and get to do something I love while my kids are in school. Fun mom job.
What does that come out to, $12,000 a year after taxes?
Haven't broken it out. Maybe? That's 12k that we wouldn't have had though - and I get to volunteer in our women's prison system, kids schools, DV shelter etc. I suppose I could sit on my ass and do nothing but I like this and it betters my community. It's a job and I'm a mom - was there a minimum to post here that I wasn't aware of?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think most telecommute jobs or flexible schedule jobs can be considered "mom" jobs. I work 7:30 to 3:30, I am home by 4:00, I consider mine a mom job.
That's only 8 hours? Don't you have to work 8.5?
Anonymous wrote:I think most telecommute jobs or flexible schedule jobs can be considered "mom" jobs. I work 7:30 to 3:30, I am home by 4:00, I consider mine a mom job.
Anonymous wrote:It depends if you are willing to take a pay cut as these tend to be PT or flex time.
I work 32 hours a week, and am a manager of a department at my company and have a lot of responsibility as well as high visibility projects. I have a lot of flexibility now, but I have been at this company for over 10 years and more than paid my dues before having kids. Nobody questions my work ethic when I walk out the door at 3:30 every day. I consider it a perfect mom job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work 32 hours a week, and am a manager of a department at my company and have a lot of responsibility as well as high visibility projects. I have a lot of flexibility now, but I have been at this company for over 10 years and more than paid my dues before having kids. Nobody questions my work ethic when I walk out the door at 3:30 every day. I consider it a perfect mom job.
I used to have this, and it was great. Very balanced. The downside was lower pay and no benefits, since they felt that giving me time flexibility was such a big bonus. I see that a lot in companies. Sad, because a lot of us who work this way are twice as productive and do super work.
I currently have a crappy mom job not in my field. It's tormentingly dull, extremely low paying, zero benefits, but I set my own hours. Hate it, but sometimes you take what you can get.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work 8:30-1:00 Mon-Fri as a legal receptionist. It's not intellectual at all (I have a Master's degree from the London School of Economics) but at least it does let me be there to pick up my kids from school and be there for extracurriculars and homework. It also enables me to be around adults at least part of the day - I appreciate this quite a bit.
How did you find that job? That sounds perfect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work 8:30-1:00 Mon-Fri as a legal receptionist. It's not intellectual at all (I have a Master's degree from the London School of Economics) but at least it does let me be there to pick up my kids from school and be there for extracurriculars and homework. It also enables me to be around adults at least part of the day - I appreciate this quite a bit.
How did you find that job? That sounds perfect.
Anonymous wrote:I work 8:30-1:00 Mon-Fri as a legal receptionist. It's not intellectual at all (I have a Master's degree from the London School of Economics) but at least it does let me be there to pick up my kids from school and be there for extracurriculars and homework. It also enables me to be around adults at least part of the day - I appreciate this quite a bit.
Anonymous wrote:For moms who just want a little extra money and something to do, I know quite a few who teach preschool (the 9-12 kind) while older kids are in school or substitute teach. They don't make much (probably comparable or less to the yoga post) but I think they find it satisfying to be working in some manner.
I have a decidedly not mom-job, with inflexible and unpredictable hours. Luckily I love my job and my husband has some flexibility!