Anonymous wrote:I am hoping for some perspectives from others to help me make the best long term decision.
I have a 5 year old daughter and a 17 month old son. My daughter is in pre-k, and while she doesn't even have homework yet, her activities are already coming with homework! I get about 9000 emails per day from school and activities. I know this is only going to increase, and I WANT to be a supportive parent to my kids. My mom was working and always too tired to be there for me, I always felt like a burden to her.
Between trying to manage home, parenting related things, and my work (which is another source of never ending balls in the air and things I have to take care of RIGHT NOW) I am starting to be very burnt out.
I have no passion for my job, although I hoped to milk it for 5-7 more years for financial reasons.
If we downsize, we can afford for me to SAH now and still have a reasonable financial cushion. We also have funded 529s thanks to an incredible gift from my parents.
I am looking to hear from parents of older kids about where they think their time is most valuably spent as kids get older. I don't want to make a knee-jerk reaction just because i feel burnt out and possibly am not yet good at managing the demands of school/activities. Does it get easier? Just looking for honest accounts. Thank you so much in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do. do NOT do it because you think you need to support your kids’ school work. It’s not developmentally appropriate for them to have required homework until they are like 10 or 11 at the earliest. Just opt out. More parents need to push back on tech and homework at inappropriate times. It’s so stupid.
I SAH and I think my kids will be better off for it. As they get older it’s kind of insane the mental load. It’s like being a social worker 24/7 with my two ADHD kids. If I were still working FT I would probably be a raging alcoholic or divorced already. There is no way I could do it. But yeah, my career is dead and the way things are going I don’t know if I’ll ever get back to it. Follow your gut but also have lots of talks with your spouse.
This is a helpful and interesting perspective, thank you. This is all new to me, and to answer the questions of other posters, she is in a play and violin (optional add ons right at her school in place of aftercare), and the drama and music teachers send multiple emails and assignments a day. It is truly bananas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it an option to work part-time? How stable is your spouse’s employment? When you say “downsize,” what do you mean exactly?
I could try to find part-time work, and I'd be open to it after a breather. My current work is all consuming and would be impossible to do part time (work in tech).
My DH is a tenured professor at an R1 university. In theory this has always been very stable. My spouse is very active in his role and has a solid career. I don't have a crystal ball, but his work appears more stable than most, and he is not overly stressed by his job and wants to do it until 70+.
When I say downsize, I mean move back into a rental house that we used to live in. We can sell our current house and pay off the remaining mortgage on the rental house. We'd be completely debt free on top of having fully funded 529s. We have healthy retirement savings thanks to my job.
The rental house is a 4 bedroom 3 bedroom house in our exact same neighborhood. It has no backyard and no pool, which is a bummer, but it's a great house and would feel adequate for my family. Walking distance to a great playground, too, and a spit from school.
We'd be giving up entertaining often at home, but that's really the only big thing I can think of that we'd be giving up, and it's hardly a deal breaker if I can exchange it for more freedom and peace.
I would really try to kick the tires on your assumption that your job must be all-consuming and cannot be done part-time. Is it just that *you* in your job cannot work in a manner that is not all-consuming? Are there really no other options or is it just that you can't imagine yourself doing them? I ask this not to criticize but to help. This used to be me. The options were there but I thought I couldn't bear to take the step down in job quality and prestige that I thought it would have involved. I now wish I'd considered them more seriously and gotten over myself.
Thank you for this suggestion, it's really insightful.
One thing I am actually considering is downsizing to take some of the feeling of financial pressure off of me, and waiting to quit my job for a bit until the dust settles. Once I know that getting laid off or fired won't have us in the red every month, I might be able to even keep better boundaries with my current job as is. At this time, I am so scared and feel like I can't say no to anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do. do NOT do it because you think you need to support your kids’ school work. It’s not developmentally appropriate for them to have required homework until they are like 10 or 11 at the earliest. Just opt out. More parents need to push back on tech and homework at inappropriate times. It’s so stupid.
I SAH and I think my kids will be better off for it. As they get older it’s kind of insane the mental load. It’s like being a social worker 24/7 with my two ADHD kids. If I were still working FT I would probably be a raging alcoholic or divorced already. There is no way I could do it. But yeah, my career is dead and the way things are going I don’t know if I’ll ever get back to it. Follow your gut but also have lots of talks with your spouse.
This is a helpful and interesting perspective, thank you. This is all new to me, and to answer the questions of other posters, she is in a play and violin (optional add ons right at her school in place of aftercare), and the drama and music teachers send multiple emails and assignments a day. It is truly bananas.
Put her in activities that are less stressful. What’s truly bananas is quitting a well-paying job because a 5-year old has too much homework.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a SAHM and enjoy every minute of it. However, I would not have stayed home if we could not easily afford to do so. Spouse had to be 100% supportive and want you to stay home with kids.
You should also know that if you stay home, you have more time to spend money. That toddler will want to do music class or tot soccer. Moms will want to go out for coffee and lunch.
I thought I would go back to work when my youngest started elementary. When kids get older, that 1x per week soccer turns into 5-6 days of soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do. do NOT do it because you think you need to support your kids’ school work. It’s not developmentally appropriate for them to have required homework until they are like 10 or 11 at the earliest. Just opt out. More parents need to push back on tech and homework at inappropriate times. It’s so stupid.
I SAH and I think my kids will be better off for it. As they get older it’s kind of insane the mental load. It’s like being a social worker 24/7 with my two ADHD kids. If I were still working FT I would probably be a raging alcoholic or divorced already. There is no way I could do it. But yeah, my career is dead and the way things are going I don’t know if I’ll ever get back to it. Follow your gut but also have lots of talks with your spouse.
This is a helpful and interesting perspective, thank you. This is all new to me, and to answer the questions of other posters, she is in a play and violin (optional add ons right at her school in place of aftercare), and the drama and music teachers send multiple emails and assignments a day. It is truly bananas.