Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't know your budget, but 160K should be enough to SAhM even if for few years.
yeah
don't get this
I stayed home on $105K a year in a SF home in a nice area. two kids - one in a local co-op nursery school
It gets more expensive as they age - with new clothes, activities, braces, you name it.
Anonymous wrote:Don't know your budget, but 160K should be enough to SAhM even if for few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you stay at home on $160K? You live in a condo so your mortgage can't be that expensive.
We need guaranteed insurance because my husband has MS and his medication is very expensive. Maintaining my job with the feds (and particularly my job in the intel community, with its essentially guaranteed job security, rather than a job at another federal agency) is therefore critical. I know people have said I'm making excuses, but that's why I can't go part-time or work from home. My job doesn't allow a work from home option and it is intensely frowned upon to go part-time.
Go part time. Let them frown. You are already mommy-tracking, and guess what? It's because you are a mom. We should really reclaim that term. They are your coworkers, not your family. Your heart is with your kiddo. Your insurance will get more expensive, though (subsidy is prorated for hours worked) but you should absolutely be making that work with your dh's salary (we are doing it on much less.) Sell the condo and rent in a closer location to work. Life is short, don't regret this priceless time with your kid. I did (went part time) it and it's one of the best decisions I've made. the rat race is more of a choice than you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is really just a vent because i know there are no solutions. i used to love my job, but a combination of asinine office politics and doing the same damn thing for 10 years with no end in sight means i just am so unmotivated. i turned a project into my supervisor today, knew it wasn't great, was told to fix it (in a nice way -- my supervisor is a nice guy), and didn't even care. i'll fix it, but i didn't care about getting mediocre feedback on it. a year ago, i would've been pretty upset. i just don't care anymore.
i live for the moment when i pick up my 1 year old from daycare. i hate that i can only spend 2 hours with her in the evening (less if, like today, she didn't nap well at daycare and so is taking a late nap). i hate that i'm tired from a 60 min commute each way through beltway traffic.
i wish i could become a SAHM, but we just can't afford it. i also don't want to put that much pressure on my husband, who has a chronic illness that is exacerbated from stress. his illness also means we can't afford to not have guaranteed insurance (i work for the feds in a job i essentially can't be fired from, while he's in the private sector).
anyway, i just wanted to vent a little.
thank feminism for your future.
Anonymous wrote:That sucks OP. I agree with others, drop to part time and make an aggressive budget.
Look for jobs in the Columbia/Laurel/Ft. Meade area... tons that require clearances, and the traffic in that direction is nothing compared to commitimg to NoVa. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:It can be done, but you have to think out of the box. I stayed home ,it was tough financially, but I would not have traded that time for anything. We have a 50 year old home, took vacations every 3 years, shopped thrift shops or clearances, etc.
The children are grown. The time went in a blink of an eye...