Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
I can’t wrap my head around these numbers, unless you had kids at 45
They didn’t buy their house with their own money.
All are correct. Had kids at 35 (me) and 45 (DH). Never had student loans (actually, I had like 5K so basically nothing). Inherited $400K that we used for a combo of down payment, college funds, stocks. We would have been okay without it, but would have needed to sell more stocks to buy our house.
I think if you plan and are very careful from your early 20s, it can be doable. Obviously having no student debt helped a lot too.
Or perhaps no student loans.
Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
Anonymous wrote:Why have kids if your both low earning? I don’t understand it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
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No, if you formula fed the first one and breastfed the others, that’s probably why the first one is dumb and socially awkward.
…oh wait, that’s also only true in crazy-person-land.
Lady, your first child is not less intelligent and less socially adept because you were working, unless you actually locked them in a box while you were gone. That assertion is nuts. You want to stay at home? Great, enjoy, go for it. But building an insane story to support your choice is not necessary or helpful, and certainly not helpful to your poor first child, who you’ve deemed inferior forevermore because - horrors! - they had a working mom for the first year of their life.
Anonymous wrote:can DH get a PT job to supplement income? I work a PT job in addition to my FT job and make an extra $12K.
My cousin is a SAHP with 4 kids (1,4,6,8) and watches 1 or 2 other kids and has to be pulling in a couple K per month.
Maybe you could work one weekend day somewhere chill to get out of the house, like a bookstore or yoga studio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
I can’t wrap my head around these numbers, unless you had kids at 45
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re a very low earning family and rely on assistance. We qualify for a childcare stipend but due to my past abuse I did not feel comfortable putting my kids in the daycare center that was available to us.
So we’re making it work the best we can. I know generally SAHM are demonized, but you wouldn’t believe what people have said to me.
It’s kind of funny. Lot’s of “women should stay home and care for their children” folks change their mind when they find out we are poor. It quickly changes to, “you should work!”
All exhausting.
Can’t imagine why people think someone who is using public assistance so they can be a SAHP should work instead…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
I can’t wrap my head around these numbers, unless you had kids at 45
That whole post is so bonkers that I think it is someone mocking SAHMs.
You have to be joking. There is no way you live in a 1.8M house on that salary given taxes and utilities alone except if someone purchased it for you. And, no way your mortgage is $300 except if someone paid it off for you. I have refinanced and done two recasts and my mortgage is still $1200 as we have been heavily paying it off and my house is 1/5 what yours costs. There is no way you can mostly fund college and other things.
I assumed she meant mortgage is $300k. But yes, still very unrealistic.
I read this post as totally sarcastic.
Anonymous wrote:can DH get a PT job to supplement income? I work a PT job in addition to my FT job and make an extra $12K.
My cousin is a SAHP with 4 kids (1,4,6,8) and watches 1 or 2 other kids and has to be pulling in a couple K per month.
Maybe you could work one weekend day somewhere chill to get out of the house, like a bookstore or yoga studio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ok. DH makes 90k. We saved a lot before kids and bought a 1.8M house in a good school district. Mortgage is under $300. We rent out a room and that brings in 15K - that's my play money. Kid's colleges are almost funded, but we're also saving for grad school.
I really wanted to quit but didn't think DH would be okay with it. Turns out, he really wanted me to stay home as well. I worked the first year after our first child was born and our other children, so I spent more time with, are much smarter and less socially awkward. I regret working when the first was a baby!
My kids can do so much with me that other kids miss out on. So many nature activities, trips, and even just snuggles make a difference. Playdates and preschool give them social interaction.
I can’t wrap my head around these numbers, unless you had kids at 45
They didn’t buy their house with their own money.
Or perhaps no student loans.
Even with no student loans, unless there’s an inheritance, or she made like $500k for several years before having kids at 45, there is no way they could have that house and fully funded 529s for three kids!