Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Purchasing and preparing food to feed a family of six every day is no joke. Especially if your kids play sports or you regularly have friends and family over.
+1
Family of 5 but my DH and oldest son are giants and both teen son and teen daughter do multiple sports. We go through a lot of food. It wouldn’t even be possible to grocery shop only once a week - we couldn’t store all of that the day we got it home.
+2
We have 3 teens (2 boys) and all play sports. Food shopping/cooking has become a lot more time consuming the last few years. I miss the days when lighter, simpler meals were enough. My teens basically eat two full dinners every day- real dinner, and then a 2nd meal at some point (usually prepped themselves). They started eating full large breakfasts again, and packing full lunches again too, to get calories in. After eating like birds and being happy with the school lunch for years. I truly cannot believe the amount of food we go through. I am at the store at least every other day no matter how hard I try to plan.
Sort of off topic, sorry. But it is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Purchasing and preparing food to feed a family of six every day is no joke. Especially if your kids play sports or you regularly have friends and family over.
+1
Family of 5 but my DH and oldest son are giants and both teen son and teen daughter do multiple sports. We go through a lot of food. It wouldn’t even be possible to grocery shop only once a week - we couldn’t store all of that the day we got it home.
+2
We have 3 teens (2 boys) and all play sports. Food shopping/cooking has become a lot more time consuming the last few years. I miss the days when lighter, simpler meals were enough. My teens basically eat two full dinners every day- real dinner, and then a 2nd meal at some point (usually prepped themselves). They started eating full large breakfasts again, and packing full lunches again too, to get calories in. After eating like birds and being happy with the school lunch for years. I truly cannot believe the amount of food we go through. I am at the store at least every other day no matter how hard I try to plan.
Sort of off topic, sorry. But it is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Purchasing and preparing food to feed a family of six every day is no joke. Especially if your kids play sports or you regularly have friends and family over.
+1
Family of 5 but my DH and oldest son are giants and both teen son and teen daughter do multiple sports. We go through a lot of food. It wouldn’t even be possible to grocery shop only once a week - we couldn’t store all of that the day we got it home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Purchasing and preparing food to feed a family of six every day is no joke. Especially if your kids play sports or you regularly have friends and family over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Longtime SAHM here. Yes I do all that during the day (except DH mows the lawn, not me) and it's very boring and monotonous. Helpful to the family, who appreciate it, but not fun or stimulating for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Anonymous wrote:I’m quitting with my youngest in first grade, and oldest in middle school (they are closely spaced).
We could make it work - we have for many years - but I don’t want to any more.
For me, it was the realization that it was never going get less stressful to balance my work and kids. When they were babies/toddlers, I felt like it was easier to provide them with good childcare and a good preschool and I didn’t stress or have much guilt. It was work but I loved my job and was motivated to make everything work.
As my kids got older (elementary) I wanted to be more involved in their learning and lives, my DH’s career took off, and I started feeling like I was being neither a good worker or a good mother. I kept thinking that the balance would get easier as my youngest got older, but it didn’t, it just shifted. Now there is less “childcare” and more guidance and teaching values.
I want time for myself, too. So I gave my notice and will soon be a SAHP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Exactly. Grocery shopping and meal prep for one so dinner is easy during the evening rush. Laundry. Cleaning. Exercise. Cleaning the gutters. Mowing the lawn. The possibilities are endless!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.
Not necessarily.
OP can take care of errands, volunteer (at the school or where ever is meaningful to OP), workout, prepare meals, etc. I'm sure there are plenty of things she can do.
Anonymous wrote:Go PT.
Otherwise you'll just sit around twiddling your thumbs at home from 830-330 (during school hours).
Itsl is not until after school which is when schedules and extracurriculars need to be juggled.