Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say that there are not enough job opportunities in your field and the ones that are available do not pay enough to be financially stable. You need to move back to where you have more jobs, better pay, and can afford to live. Explain that although you love living close to family (even if this is a white lie), your obligation to raise your children with more financial stability forces you to move back to DC.
Forgot to say that any family that would give you grief over this decision is dysfunctional and toxic.
Anonymous wrote:You say that there are not enough job opportunities in your field and the ones that are available do not pay enough to be financially stable. You need to move back to where you have more jobs, better pay, and can afford to live. Explain that although you love living close to family (even if this is a white lie), your obligation to raise your children with more financial stability forces you to move back to DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:Obviously the closeness to family is not worth the financial
Cost for you. It is a reflection on them, whether you want to admit it or not.
I don't know how much OPs family is struggling financially or emotionally, but I'd like to think that when my son is their age, I would put his needs about where he should live above my own wants about where he should live. I'd like to think I would wish him success, and not take things personally that aren't about me.
Two years is a good try.
I dot. Disagree, but in some ways the fact that op tried makes it worse, like family wasn't good enough/helpful enough in those two years.
Anonymous wrote:6 months ago you decided. You considered it before then. Your problem is you've been talking about this for too long - and you haven't even moved yet. You should have waited until you actually had a move date. All this "support" you're asking for is too much, you're expecting too much.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you moved closer to family to get help with two young kids. Regardless, don't say anything until one of you actually has a job. Then you can announce, "great news, blank got a wonderful job in dc!"
Anonymous wrote:I think if you told them it was about finances they would understand, but it sounds in your post you are blaming them for things working or that you are prioritizing having things over people. Which is your choice, but I can understand them being hurt by that
Maybe I'm overstepping here, but I think you and your husband are focusing on outside issues instead of your relationship, how you work together and how you manage things.
You blamed DC last time.
Now you are blaming NY.
You'll go back to DC and have the same issues because you aren't dealing with things.
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone,
We lived in DC for 7 years and moved back to NY area to be closer to family after we had our second child. My husband had this grand idea that living closer to family would improve our quality of life. Well, two years later and when it comes to finances, housing, job opps and various other things, our quality of life has gone down the tubesEverything has been a struggle in ways it wasnt before. 6 months ago we made the decision together that we will move back to DC area. We havent moved yet but plan to. Our families are taking it soooo personally and acting like we want to move back bc we dont care about being far from them, that we dont value family etc. They arent being supportive at all and I dont know how to explain it nicely with out getting defensive. Has anyone been thru this? Any advice?