Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get home from work early one day a week and I have one week day off. You bet your ass they’re still in aftercare til regular time. Every once in a while I will pick them up early as a surprise day. But really it’s the only time I have “free” all week. Take the quiet and grace when you can.
Plus kid is an old lady and really loves less structured time with others. She wants to spend at least an hour or two at aftercare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Daycare allows my spouse and I to both work lower stress jobs and spend individually more time with our kids. We're both layers and left biglaw for different public interest jobs. Of one of us stayed hole the other could make more income working a higher stress job, but this allows balance.
I posted about feeling guilty, and we're NOT lawyers, so we can't live comfortably on one (five figure) income...but I like your perspective. We do have pretty unimpressive incomes for this area in part because when we've been able to prioritize flexibility and reasonable hours, we always have. So maybe day care is the cost of having two otherwise involved parents who rarely have to work nights or weekends, and have some flexibility for school hours, sick days, etc. Thanks!
Sorry for all the typos. I was typing while waiting in line at the drugstore.
But basically, me not staying home lets my husband also be the dad he wants to be. It's important to keep that in mind. Putting all the finances on one spouse so the other can work.can actually end up stressing both out. You have to consider what is best for both parents and kid(s).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get home from work early one day a week and I have one week day off. You bet your ass they’re still in aftercare til regular time. Every once in a while I will pick them up early as a surprise day. But really it’s the only time I have “free” all week. Take the quiet and grace when you can.
Plus kid is an old lady and really loves less structured time with others. She wants to spend at least an hour or two at aftercare.
Old lady was meant to read “only”.
Anonymous wrote:I don't but my DH has a lot of guilt. Some of it has to do with the fact that I was raised by 2 working parents so daycare and aftercare were a part of my life and his Mom was a stay at home Mom. Generally DD has liked aftercare so it works out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely. Every single day. But I never admit it to anyone IRL. I tell them how great it is and how much my kid loves it. I have 200 rationalizations for why daycare is superior to nanny or SAHM care but don’t really believe it.
I felt exactly the same way when my kids were in daycare so I get you. I really yearned to be with them and felt bad that they were there until 5 or 5:30. Evenings were rushed because they were tired. Sure, they had fun with their friends but so do the kids with SAHM and playgroups. Anyway, it wasn’t in my cards to stay at home then and now that my kids are older and no longer in daycare I don’t think about it anymore. But I totally get your feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. We are at the bus stop a little before 9 and the bus rolls into our neighborhood at 4:30-4:45 ish.
Even when I did pick up and drop off, the day was almost as long so it's not a bus thing either. Our school day is just very long.
Those would be ideal times for me. My DD is in school 8-2:30. The 2:30 is what's killer. My core work hours are until 3pm, as are most people's. If she could just get out at 3:30 that would save her from aftercare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. We are at the bus stop a little before 9 and the bus rolls into our neighborhood at 4:30-4:45 ish.
Even when I did pick up and drop off, the day was almost as long so it's not a bus thing either. Our school day is just very long.
Those would be ideal times for me. My DD is in school 8-2:30. The 2:30 is what's killer. My core work hours are until 3pm, as are most people's. If she could just get out at 3:30 that would save her from aftercare.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. We are at the bus stop a little before 9 and the bus rolls into our neighborhood at 4:30-4:45 ish.
Even when I did pick up and drop off, the day was almost as long so it's not a bus thing either. Our school day is just very long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get home from work early one day a week and I have one week day off. You bet your ass they’re still in aftercare til regular time. Every once in a while I will pick them up early as a surprise day. But really it’s the only time I have “free” all week. Take the quiet and grace when you can.
Plus kid is an old lady and really loves less structured time with others. She wants to spend at least an hour or two at aftercare.
Anonymous wrote:I get home from work early one day a week and I have one week day off. You bet your ass they’re still in aftercare til regular time. Every once in a while I will pick them up early as a surprise day. But really it’s the only time I have “free” all week. Take the quiet and grace when you can.