Anonymous wrote:I'm curious, what kind of positions are you considering OP? Are you thinking of trying to go big law now? In house? Stay fed but go to a more demanding position?
I'm the 31 year old pp with a 6 month old and I'm also a lawyer. I would not try to go to a law firm and get pregnant at the same time if that's what you're considering. FWIW, I graduated from a tier 1 school in '07 and I can't think of many classmates who are still at firms and happy about it.
If you're thinking about staying fed, what about a 6 month detail?
Anonymous wrote:This is a tougher question that PPs are letting on, but the thing is that you won't know whether it's best for you until after you have kids...
I am in the same position - great Fed job with lots of flexibility and a wonderful boss, but the work is boring and not challenging. When it was time for me to start a family, I decided to stay put because I knew my job would be great for being a mom. It has been, in every way. But I am still bored and looking for new challenges. Now that I pay through the nose for childcare, it is really important to me that the hours I am away from my kids add up to something. So I am looking to expand my career. But friends in the same position feel as your mother does - that they don't care about their careers now that they have kids and are grateful for the flexible job.
Short answer - stay where you are and see how you feel after you have a baby.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious, what kind of positions are you considering OP? Are you thinking of trying to go big law now? In house? Stay fed but go to a more demanding position?
I'm the 31 year old pp with a 6 month old and I'm also a lawyer. I would not try to go to a law firm and get pregnant at the same time if that's what you're considering. FWIW, I graduated from a tier 1 school in '07 and I can't think of many classmates who are still at firms and happy about it.
If you're thinking about staying fed, what about a 6 month detail?
Anonymous wrote:Flexibility is very very helpful for at least one parent. But I would have found it extremely hard to leave my sweet baby and toddler with a nanny and then day care if I did not think that I was contributing to something meaningful and interesting at work. Sometimes you can find non boring and flexible in the same package, do it doesn't hurt to keep your eyes open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a tougher question that PPs are letting on, but the thing is that you won't know whether it's best for you until after you have kids...
I am in the same position - great Fed job with lots of flexibility and a wonderful boss, but the work is boring and not challenging. When it was time for me to start a family, I decided to stay put because I knew my job would be great for being a mom. It has been, in every way. But I am still bored and looking for new challenges. Now that I pay through the nose for childcare, it is really important to me that the hours I am away from my kids add up to something. So I am looking to expand my career. But friends in the same position feel as your mother does - that they don't care about their careers now that they have kids and are grateful for the flexible job.
Short answer - stay where you are and see how you feel after you have a baby.
I strongly agree with this. I thought after I had kids, my career wouldn't matter so much, but I actually find it more frustrating to be in a job that bores me. However, I am loathe to give it up and go after something more because it is so great to have the flexibility. I think you won't know for sure until you have kids.
OP here -- This is a great point too. I'm somewhat worried I will resent my boring job for taking me away from my kids, even if I am working at home. The good news is we have family that will help with childcare part time, but we'll still probably need a nanny or daycare for part of the week. I hate the idea of going to a job I don't love just to hand that $ over to someone else to watch my child.
I like the ideas about always keeping my résumé out there and looking for opportunities. Hopefully having kids will help me somewhat separate my identity from my job though, because I feel like graduating during a crummy economy has somewhat taken it's toll on my confidence in the professional arena. Will be keeping my eyes open for a new job that maybe offers a mix of some flexibility (even if not the extent I have now) with a little more responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a tougher question that PPs are letting on, but the thing is that you won't know whether it's best for you until after you have kids...
I am in the same position - great Fed job with lots of flexibility and a wonderful boss, but the work is boring and not challenging. When it was time for me to start a family, I decided to stay put because I knew my job would be great for being a mom. It has been, in every way. But I am still bored and looking for new challenges. Now that I pay through the nose for childcare, it is really important to me that the hours I am away from my kids add up to something. So I am looking to expand my career. But friends in the same position feel as your mother does - that they don't care about their careers now that they have kids and are grateful for the flexible job.
Short answer - stay where you are and see how you feel after you have a baby.
I strongly agree with this. I thought after I had kids, my career wouldn't matter so much, but I actually find it more frustrating to be in a job that bores me. However, I am loathe to give it up and go after something more because it is so great to have the flexibility. I think you won't know for sure until you have kids.
Anonymous wrote:This is a tougher question that PPs are letting on, but the thing is that you won't know whether it's best for you until after you have kids...
I am in the same position - great Fed job with lots of flexibility and a wonderful boss, but the work is boring and not challenging. When it was time for me to start a family, I decided to stay put because I knew my job would be great for being a mom. It has been, in every way. But I am still bored and looking for new challenges. Now that I pay through the nose for childcare, it is really important to me that the hours I am away from my kids add up to something. So I am looking to expand my career. But friends in the same position feel as your mother does - that they don't care about their careers now that they have kids and are grateful for the flexible job.
Short answer - stay where you are and see how you feel after you have a baby.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you can try to have the best of both worlds.
In my late 20s, I had a very good and prestigious job. It had a lot of growth potential and I was on track to be promoted. That job path meant a lot of travel and long hours though. And a lot of ass-in-chair time. Limited flexibility. I left pro-actively to find something more family friendly. I went to an overall more family-oriented organization and took a slight demotion to get into this organization. It was an ego deflating move at the time. But I thought my long-term prospects there would be good, even though the job I took wasn't great. I then started trying to have kids. I was bored in my job and felt very unchallenged, pretty much from the get go. I also felt very behind compared to my peers. I ended up spending about 4 years in this dud job and it wasn't great. But I did a good job, networked, and made a good name for myself in the organization. I let a few promotion opportunities go by because it wasn't going to be the right fit in terms of maintaining my work-life balance. When my first child was about 1, I got an opportunity to take a promotion that really met my requirements and I ran with it. I busted ass to prove myself for about a year at that job and now I have a job I'm really very happy with in a flexible, family-oriented organization. And I put off having my second for a bit longer to establish myself in the new job. Now I have two and I really feel like I have hit the jackpot on all fronts. Am I the most successful person on the planet? No. But I have a good job with real challenges and real responsibilities and my kids are still able to be my top priority.
What is my point - do not just give up and think you have to stay at the dud job forever. I think that is soul sucking, personally. Your kids will grow up so fast and if you are going to work every day, there has to be something in it for you too. Just my 2 cents. You are young. You have time to have kids AND get on a more rewarding career track. I would try to focus on putting yourself in a better position to make slow and steady advancements, whatever that looks like for you. Be strategic and recognize there will be some sacrifices along the way - both professionally and personally. But I think you can try to get to a place where you're happy on all fronts.