Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two and am contemplating a third, but I felt this way when my second was around a year old.
It gets easier in a sense when your youngest hits two years old and can play a bit more independently- giving you some space to get things done while simultaneously supervising them.
That said, you have another year ahead of the really really hard phase. There’s only one of you so the answer is just acknowledging what you can let go of to make time for the things that matter. More takeout dinners for a year? A babysitter for a few hours on the weekend so you can workout or run some errands? Etc.
Do you want your kids to do extra curriculars? It doesn’t really get that much easier honestly. When my kids were small they were asleep at 7pm.
Anonymous wrote:It’s always the 3-kid people who say this. It’s why I didn’t have three kids. My two are in MS/HS now and I still don’t see where they extra bandwidth for a third world come from without shortchanging someone.
Anonymous wrote:I have two and am contemplating a third, but I felt this way when my second was around a year old.
It gets easier in a sense when your youngest hits two years old and can play a bit more independently- giving you some space to get things done while simultaneously supervising them.
That said, you have another year ahead of the really really hard phase. There’s only one of you so the answer is just acknowledging what you can let go of to make time for the things that matter. More takeout dinners for a year? A babysitter for a few hours on the weekend so you can workout or run some errands? Etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should work on not being a perfectionist. 80/20 really is the way.
What is 80/20?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should work on not being a perfectionist. 80/20 really is the way.
What is 80/20?
Anonymous wrote:I simply do not understand how often these posts come up.
Time is finite. Energy is finite. You have three children, two careers that sound fairly demanding, plus you and your husband also have needs outside of work because you are human beings.
You need to make choices, and you need to understand that when you make choices, there is usually a loss as well as a gain. The idea that you are both going to be able to charge hard into these upcoming promotions, AND you are going to hold your kids/parenting to what sound like very high standards, AND you will get your DH doing more at home... it's nuts. That's not going to happen.
This is why people sometimes mommy (or daddy!) track at work. It's why people make some parenting choices for ease instead of perfection (putting all the kids in the okay aftercare program instead of bespoke activities that require a lot more parental effort, accepting that one or more of your kids might be B students because you don't have the time/money/focus to provide tutoring and help any time they don't excel at school, etc.). It's why people do things like move closer to their parents or extended family, move to lower COL areas, and on and on. They don't do these things because they aren't as smart as you, or aren't as good parents, or don't care as much. They do them because when faced with the same logistical challenged you are being faced with, they sucked it up and made the trade off that would make their lives work instead of driving themselves absolutely insane trying to have it all and do it all.
I mean, I can tell from your post that you are a fairly well educated person with probably a decent amount of experience figuring out logistics and making things work, whether in your job or in your personal life. I think you know what the answers are here. But it sounds like you're having a hard time letting go of this image of a perfect family with two adults with amazing careers and three perfect children with no issues whatsoever who do all the things and always look perfect, and a house that's always neat as a pin, and on and on. Well guess what, your life will NEVER look like that. Or if it does, something else will be going wrong under the surface because living to that standard is not human and trying it will make someone (you, your spouse, your kids) crack. You are human. Be human.
Anonymous wrote:Eh past a certain income level there are major diminishing returns on actual happiness in terms of time spent. Relentlessly grinding out climbing the ladder is a choice that comes with a cost. Have fun being exhausted so you can afford marginally fancier things than you would otherwise own I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Eh past a certain income level there are major diminishing returns on actual happiness in terms of time spent. Relentlessly grinding out climbing the ladder is a choice that comes with a cost. Have fun being exhausted so you can afford marginally fancier things than you would otherwise own I guess.