Anonymous wrote:Sah makes you dumb. I am glad my mom worked ft and told me the interesting people she met at work as a doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you wait so late in life to have children then turn them over to someone else to raise? Think about how much time you really spend with your children if you work full time at any age...
Oh and BYW, I have been home since 6 months after my first was born and I wouldn't change a thing. 3children now, elem./middle/ Sometimes I think it would be easier to work full time outside of the home because at home moms work 24 hours a day. If work is your thing maybe you can do some at home work but fair warning - it is tough. If you can swing it financially and you want to be home my advice is stay home. It goes by very fast.
Try it, then. I assure you it is much, much harder, unless you, too, compress all your housework/cooking/homework help/soccer driving into the post-work hours. Speaking as a former SAHM here, not someone who thinks she knows about a life she hasn't led.
OP, I agree it's a personal decision. Just couldn't let that comment slide.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I raised three with both of working full time. I loved my job and found it fulfilling. Now I am retired and am helping my kids so they can work and raise their kids. My daughters have told me they are glad I worked because I was a role model for them. Beware of the trap of having everything in your life revolve around the kids. its hard to believe but they will grow up and you will need to be on your own. Take a look at the thread about older moms calling their grown kids and annoying them because they have nothing to say but to complain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Empty nester here. My advice in a nutshell: stay home as long as you possibly can. Yes, through high school if possible. It matters to the kids ALOT. In subtle and more obvious ways. They won't thank you while they are home, but will thank you later. You don't get those years back.
Another mom of older kids here - One graduated from college last year. Three in college. Our youngest is a high school junior. I've been at home since the first one was born 24 years ago. I went back very part-time when my youngest started middle school.
They need you at home at every age, but in some ways those teen age years are the most critical. Mine have expressed many times how much they appreciated having mom at home. One if them mentioned it in a speech a couple of months ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you wait so late in life to have children then turn them over to someone else to raise? Think about how much time you really spend with your children if you work full time at any age...
Oh and BYW, I have been home since 6 months after my first was born and I wouldn't change a thing. 3children now, elem./middle/ Sometimes I think it would be easier to work full time outside of the home because at home moms work 24 hours a day. If work is your thing maybe you can do some at home work but fair warning - it is tough. If you can swing it financially and you want to be home my advice is stay home. It goes by very fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Highly personal. I loved being at home with DS when he was 0-6. Now he is on school property or engaging in an organized activity (at which I am not present) from 8 a.m. to 5:00 pm most days. Soccer, chess, instruments, math club, student council, etc.
Me personally, I don't see the point of "staying at home" while DS is in another building, by law or by his choice, KWIM? What would be the point for me to sit at home while he is not even here?
To be fair, SAMs don't "sit at home" and wait for DCs to come home. KWIM?
Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar position. My kids are 6 and 3. I'm probably going to quit in next year or so. As my 6 yr old has gotten more involved in after school sports and the homework load increases, I really have started to have a 2nd job after work. Between getting dinner on the table, driving to activities, and monitoring homework, there's just too much happening between 6-8pm and no one is relaxed.
If I could do the laundry, go grocery shopping, maintain the household, set up appointments, pack lunch for the next day and start dinner all before 3pm, that would free up a lot my time in the evenings. The ability to start activities at 3:30 would also reduce the stress in the household. Then of course, weekends would be free.
I see it starting now and now letting up until college. I'm activity socking money away now in anticipation of going down to one income in the near future.
Anonymous wrote:Empty nester here. My advice in a nutshell: stay home as long as you possibly can. Yes, through high school if possible. It matters to the kids ALOT. In subtle and more obvious ways. They won't thank you while they are home, but will thank you later. You don't get those years back.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you wait so late in life to have children then turn them over to someone else to raise? Think about how much time you really spend with your children if you work full time at any age...