Anonymous wrote:Three months will believe an eternity for the kids. Can't believe a mother would do this.
This is unheard of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly? I would pass on the assignment, up to and including resigning. I know it's not what you want to hear, but there's no way I'd leave my kids (2 and 5) for three months.
My DH did a 3-month stint overseas when our first was 2, and his relationship with DC hasn't really ever recovered. It has made me extremely conservative about spending time apart as a family. I feel for military families who deal with deployments -- it is incredibly tough.
I appreciate your feedback. You're right that it isn't what I want to hear. Passing on the assignment simply is not an option. Looking back on it, what could your DH have done differently to keep the bond stronger? That's what I am looking for.
PP back. In-person visits seem crucial. DH was a 24-hour plane trip away, so that wasn't an option for him. Even a single day every few weeks would make a huge difference. DH physically being absent seemed to be the biggest deal to DC -- missing the minutia of life (breakfast, going to the playground, reading books, etc). She was very anxious and avoided DH for a few months on his return, I think because she was scared he would disappear again. Your kids are older so I think that will be less of an issue for you -- there's worlds between a 2 and 4 year old's understanding of this sort of thing. But if I were you, even if it's expensive or inconvenient, I would come home as much as possible and just spend the entire time with your kids. And maybe check in in advance with a counselor to see if there are better strategies for preparing kids for a parents' extended absence? I wish, in retrospect, we'd done that. There have got to be good resources in this area for that.
Anonymous wrote:21:53, thank you so much for these great suggestions. I am planning to take the kids to Build-A-Bear so we can each create the same/similar bear to keep with us. I will definitely get the books you suggested and I like the idea of sending mail to open every day. They LOVE getting mail.
I'm used to the pudginess of DCUM but still a little surprised with the responses acting like this is so unusual. No one would bat an eyelash if I were a man, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly? I would pass on the assignment, up to and including resigning. I know it's not what you want to hear, but there's no way I'd leave my kids (2 and 5) for three months.
My DH did a 3-month stint overseas when our first was 2, and his relationship with DC hasn't really ever recovered. It has made me extremely conservative about spending time apart as a family. I feel for military families who deal with deployments -- it is incredibly tough.
I appreciate your feedback. You're right that it isn't what I want to hear. Passing on the assignment simply is not an option. Looking back on it, what could your DH have done differently to keep the bond stronger? That's what I am looking for.
Anonymous wrote:There is absolutely nothing you can do that will make this ok for your kids. Of course you have ever right to go. But don't expect to make things easier for your children. Unless your family will starve or lose their home, no job assignment is worth this.
You asked for suggestions on making it easier for you. Somehow I doubt this will be difficult for you.
Anonymous wrote:I would never take such an assignment. They can't force you. I could quit if they did.
How can you even consider this?
Btw, people will judge you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never take such an assignment. They can't force you. I could quit if they did.
How can you even consider this?
Btw, people will judge you.
Well, then, it's a good thing they asked me and not you. Judge away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how a regular job can expect you to relocate for 3 months without frequent opportunities to come home, especially when you have young children. What line of work is this?
I'm saying this as a military spouse. What can be so encompassing that you can't tell them you need to come home every other weekend Friday-Monday?
I can come home on the weekends, but when I'm at a job site in an area where it takes 2 hours to drive to the airport, plus the flight time, and then drive home from either Dulles or Reagan, and the only flight back requires me to leave pretty early on Sunday, it just isn't ideal. I am going to come home at least once and my DH and the kids will come out there a couple of times. It isn't something like Boston or Philly where I can get the late flight home after work on Friday and then the 6 am back Monday morning. And I need to not be prepared and not exhausted come Monday morning. The logistics are not good.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how a regular job can expect you to relocate for 3 months without frequent opportunities to come home, especially when you have young children. What line of work is this?
I'm saying this as a military spouse. What can be so encompassing that you can't tell them you need to come home every other weekend Friday-Monday?