Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately, my work has to be done regardless, and everything else is somewhat negotiable. Back to school time has thrown a million events my way that are making things so hard. I have kids at two different schools and have no less than seven events during work hours over a 2.5 week period. This stuff is so hard for me, but I have to go, and so I will make it work.
Where that leaves me is the more negotiable other stuff. The first rec soccer practice that normally I'd try to attend and I know a ton of parents will be there, and my kid will be upset that he is one of the only ones (maybe the only one) with a nanny there instead of mom. Or Friday's camp performance, same deal. I could technically make this stuff work, but I get such little sleep as it is and I just don't know where to draw the line. I am feeling mom guilt in the biggest way right now. I don't know how everyone does it. If I go to the performance and soccer practice and whatever else comes up, that time will truly come out of my sleep, which already hovers around 5-6 hrs/night (because I will have to work late(r) at night to make up for it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have kids if they aren't a priority? My mom placed her job before me I don't have as strong of a bond with her because she was far more proud of her work accomplishments than anything that had to do with me. I always took a back seat. Now we barely talk. What kind of future do you want with your kids? When you are retired, is what you'd in your career worth sacrificing your time with them? Do you really think a nanny should replace Mom?
Geez. The woman has to support her children. So did your mom too, I'm guessing. Get therapy and stop blaming your mom for not being supermom.
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately, my work has to be done regardless, and everything else is somewhat negotiable. Back to school time has thrown a million events my way that are making things so hard. I have kids at two different schools and have no less than seven events during work hours over a 2.5 week period. This stuff is so hard for me, but I have to go, and so I will make it work.
Where that leaves me is the more negotiable other stuff. The first rec soccer practice that normally I'd try to attend and I know a ton of parents will be there, and my kid will be upset that he is one of the only ones (maybe the only one) with a nanny there instead of mom. Or Friday's camp performance, same deal. I could technically make this stuff work, but I get such little sleep as it is and I just don't know where to draw the line. I am feeling mom guilt in the biggest way right now. I don't know how everyone does it. If I go to the performance and soccer practice and whatever else comes up, that time will truly come out of my sleep, which already hovers around 5-6 hrs/night (because I will have to work late(r) at night to make up for it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a medium-level job, but just want to be another post telling the sexist sanct-imommies to go to hell. Let's support one another! And yes, love the idea of having your kids help pick what they most want to you attend, and if you have a spouse, share that burden.
Oh, FFS. How about we own our choices and the trade-offs that come with them? I'm not a sexist and I'm not a "sanctimommy" (but speaking of sexism...), I'm just fed up with people not owning the decisions they make. If "having it all means" being wealthy, fit, and spending lots of time with our children and our partner, then usually something has to give. That's *okay*. It's life. Choose the life that best fits you and go from there.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to be 100% honest and say maybe what others aren't saying: my kids didn't give one care if dad was there for the event.
All the pressure fell on me because *I* was the one they wanted there the most. Is DH a bad dad? No. Was he a disinterested dad or absent dad? No. But when an event was announced, they were excited to have mom there and dad was just an afterthought. Kind of like, mom HAS to be there and oh, of course dad will be there.
This went for school plays, field trips, and sports practices/games as well. Were they happy when DH was there? Sure. But did they cry and lay on the guilt trip if he couldn't make it? No. "That's okay, you can see the video!" But if I was even late to something, OMG, it was like the end of the world with them! And the guilt!
It definitely wasn't one of those situations where they wanted me there for the artsy stuff and DH there for the sports stuff. I'm the least athletic person and know next to zero about sports (I still just cheer when the parents around me cheer). It was just about wanting their mom there to see them do ____.
And the weird thing is, I remember being the same way. Meh if my dad came, but I felt like the biggest loser among my friends if I was one of the few there without a mom present.
Anonymous wrote:Why have kids if they aren't a priority? My mom placed her job before me I don't have as strong of a bond with her because she was far more proud of her work accomplishments than anything that had to do with me. I always took a back seat. Now we barely talk. What kind of future do you want with your kids? When you are retired, is what you'd in your career worth sacrificing your time with them? Do you really think a nanny should replace Mom?
Anonymous wrote:I have a medium-level job, but just want to be another post telling the sexist sanct-imommies to go to hell. Let's support one another! And yes, love the idea of having your kids help pick what they most want to you attend, and if you have a spouse, share that burden.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to be 100% honest and say maybe what others aren't saying: my kids didn't give one care if dad was there for the event.
All the pressure fell on me because *I* was the one they wanted there the most. Is DH a bad dad? No. Was he a disinterested dad or absent dad? No. But when an event was announced, they were excited to have mom there and dad was just an afterthought. Kind of like, mom HAS to be there and oh, of course dad will be there.
This went for school plays, field trips, and sports practices/games as well. Were they happy when DH was there? Sure. But did they cry and lay on the guilt trip if he couldn't make it? No. "That's okay, you can see the video!" But if I was even late to something, OMG, it was like the end of the world with them! And the guilt!
It definitely wasn't one of those situations where they wanted me there for the artsy stuff and DH there for the sports stuff. I'm the least athletic person and know next to zero about sports (I still just cheer when the parents around me cheer). It was just about wanting their mom there to see them do ____.
And the weird thing is, I remember being the same way. Meh if my dad came, but I felt like the biggest loser among my friends if I was one of the few there without a mom present.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to be 100% honest and say maybe what others aren't saying: my kids didn't give one care if dad was there for the event.
All the pressure fell on me because *I* was the one they wanted there the most. Is DH a bad dad? No. Was he a disinterested dad or absent dad? No. But when an event was announced, they were excited to have mom there and dad was just an afterthought. Kind of like, mom HAS to be there and oh, of course dad will be there.
This went for school plays, field trips, and sports practices/games as well. Were they happy when DH was there? Sure. But did they cry and lay on the guilt trip if he couldn't make it? No. "That's okay, you can see the video!" But if I was even late to something, OMG, it was like the end of the world with them! And the guilt!
It definitely wasn't one of those situations where they wanted me there for the artsy stuff and DH there for the sports stuff. I'm the least athletic person and know next to zero about sports (I still just cheer when the parents around me cheer). It was just about wanting their mom there to see them do ____.
And the weird thing is, I remember being the same way. Meh if my dad came, but I felt like the biggest loser among my friends if I was one of the few there without a mom present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have kids if they aren't a priority? My mom placed her job before me I don't have as strong of a bond with her because she was far more proud of her work accomplishments than anything that had to do with me. I always took a back seat. Now we barely talk. What kind of future do you want with your kids? When you are retired, is what you'd in your career worth sacrificing your time with them? Do you really think a nanny should replace Mom?
Why don’t you ask a Big Law father that?
Or a senator who is also a dad?
Or the current or former president? Or the two presidents before them?
Or heart surgeon dads?
Oh, because you’re a sexist, ignorant arse. That’s why.