Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: You sound overly emotional, OP. These are tough and very precarious times right now. Try to postpone your regret for choices made until after this is over and we’ve returned to normal.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
So working parents aren’t full time parents? Do you homeschool your children, PP?
Don’t take the bait, the pp is a frump stay at home that feels better by making statements like this.
I am a WOHM but I kind of agree with this statement - and I would agree 100% if you add “or educated grandparent” to the end of the sentence. If I didn’t have my mom around to oversee our nanny, I would quit for sure.
You have young children. By the time your children are in elementary school, you'll be missing, at most, 2 hours of their day. And the older they get, the more of that two hours they'll spend outside of the home doing clubs, sports, etc., anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I have a teen and a 6 yr old and I’ve worked full time my entire life outside of the home. I’ve enjoyed being with them so much these last couple of weeks, but realized today how much I’ve missed on. I would give anything not to go back to work after all of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
So working parents aren’t full time parents? Do you homeschool your children, PP?
Don’t take the bait, the pp is a frump stay at home that feels better by making statements like this.
I am a WOHM but I kind of agree with this statement - and I would agree 100% if you add “or educated grandparent” to the end of the sentence. If I didn’t have my mom around to oversee our nanny, I would quit for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Children really do benefit from having a full time parent. There's no way around that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: You sound overly emotional, OP. These are tough and very precarious times right now. Try to postpone your regret for choices made until after this is over and we’ve returned to normal.
+1.
Anonymous wrote: You sound overly emotional, OP. These are tough and very precarious times right now. Try to postpone your regret for choices made until after this is over and we’ve returned to normal.
Anonymous wrote:SAHM - I love being home but I think the time with them when they are in elementary school on up through high school is far far more important than when they are little ones as that is what they will remember. Kids need you more, not less as they get older even though they start to separate. Maybe you can switch to part-time as a compromise.
Anonymous wrote:I hope that one positive thing to come out of this pandemic is teleworking. This may be the new reality which will allow a lot of work-life balance. Hopefully, it will also allow many WOHMs to remain in the workforce and not quit to become a SAHM.
I became a SAHM because I could swing it economically and my work was then not as important to me as physically being with my kids. The workplace is so mother-unfriendly that I have had no regrets in my choice. And no retirement fund for me could be better than all the time I spent with my kids, when they were babies and now when they are teens in HS. But, if I had the flexibility to work from home, I would have hired a full time nanny to be with me and my child and happily given her my entire paycheck for the five years my kid was at home. After my children would have started going to school, I would not have needed a nanny but again I would have been happy to pay someone to do chores etc while I worked some flex hours from home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope that one positive thing to come out of this pandemic is teleworking. This may be the new reality which will allow a lot of work-life balance. Hopefully, it will also allow many WOHMs to remain in the workforce and not quit to become a SAHM.
I became a SAHM because I could swing it economically and my work was then not as important to me as physically being with my kids. The workplace is so mother-unfriendly that I have had no regrets in my choice. And no retirement fund for me could be better than all the time I spent with my kids, when they were babies and now when they are teens in HS. But, if I had the flexibility to work from home, I would have hired a full time nanny to be with me and my child and happily given her my entire paycheck for the five years my kid was at home. After my children would have started going to school, I would not have needed a nanny but again I would have been happy to pay someone to do chores etc while I worked some flex hours from home.
This is interesting. I luckily was fairly high up in my company when I had my kids and therefore was able to have a lot of flexibility/freedom to come and go as needed, wfh when needed, and earn about 7 weeks of time off each year. That's probably the reason why I chose to stay in the workforce.
Anonymous wrote:I hope that one positive thing to come out of this pandemic is teleworking. This may be the new reality which will allow a lot of work-life balance. Hopefully, it will also allow many WOHMs to remain in the workforce and not quit to become a SAHM.
I became a SAHM because I could swing it economically and my work was then not as important to me as physically being with my kids. The workplace is so mother-unfriendly that I have had no regrets in my choice. And no retirement fund for me could be better than all the time I spent with my kids, when they were babies and now when they are teens in HS. But, if I had the flexibility to work from home, I would have hired a full time nanny to be with me and my child and happily given her my entire paycheck for the five years my kid was at home. After my children would have started going to school, I would not have needed a nanny but again I would have been happy to pay someone to do chores etc while I worked some flex hours from home.