Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird. I’m spending less time with my kids now.
We would normally be out and about doing things together.
Sitting around the house is not more bonding than what I did before with them.
If you didn’t work... you realize you would be home alone because they are at school.
Your post sounds very illogical and unrealistic.
My children have friends they spend time with, sports, and band practice. I’m spending a lot more time with my kids now by filling those voids. Are your children very young or don’t participate in any extracurricular activities?
My kids do all kinds of extracurriculars.
You don’t spend time with your kids when there is not a pandemic?
Anonymous wrote:Really? Geez, DH and I don’t feel that way at all. Maybe because we always prioritized time with the kids on evenings and weekends. And we both have fulfilling careers. My kids are now 14 and 11 and I knew them (enjoyed them fully) way before this situation . It’s been fine being home but I love our normal life.
I’d sad you feel such regret, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird. I’m spending less time with my kids now.
We would normally be out and about doing things together.
Sitting around the house is not more bonding than what I did before with them.
If you didn’t work... you realize you would be home alone because they are at school.
Your post sounds very illogical and unrealistic.
Opposite for us. Both parents here working FT at home. I thought we would be at each other's throats by now, but the kids have been really great so far. We have been laughing a lot at meal times, and just generally spending a lot of time together as opposed to schlepping the kids around from one activity to another on the weekend. Today, we started preparing our garden for spring planting.
OP - it's great that you are connecting with your kids. It's always great if you have that choice and chance to quit for a year or so to spend some time with the kids. I did it for a year or so.
IMO, this crisis has brought my family closer.
Anonymous wrote:SAHM - I love being home but I think the time with them when they are in elementary school on up through high school is far far more important than when they are little ones as that is what they will remember. Kids need you more, not less as they get older even though they start to separate. Maybe you can switch to part-time as a compromise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
So working parents aren’t full time parents? Do you homeschool your children, PP?
Don’t take the bait, the pp is a frump stay at home that feels better by making statements like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
So working parents aren’t full time parents? Do you homeschool your children, PP?
Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a SAHM and my kids are teens, now.
Look, OP, there are significant downsides. One of which is since you are always there, your time, and your presence, is taken for granted. The relationship you are having now with your kids is like a vacation-relationship; if you were there all the time, the nature of the relationship would change.
I have a friend who works long hours away from home and when she's home, the family prioritizes their togetherness. Eating as a family. Hiking as a family. Etc. The kids like, and value, spending time with their mom because they've had to *miss* their mom when they wanted her around.
So enjoy the unexpected gift of this situation, but don't mistake the acute for the chronic.