Anonymous wrote:No child ever recalls fondly how much their parent works. They recall the time home with family, going to their events, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who I think are genuinely present dads who are in-house, but zero who are in big law. FWIW I am an SES government lawyer who is probably about 10 years older than you. I make over $200K now. I would choose my job over my old big law job 10 times out of 10. Even at my busiest work times, I will be at the thing I told my kids I’d be at; I will turn off my phone for a day if we have special plans. I could never have done that in big law. I had a partner track me down through my husband’s phone on a weekend when I didn’t answer my phone for a 10 minute period for a new “emergency” I had no reason to suspect was coming on a Sunday. No thanks.
My DH is like you. However he thinks his SES position will be reclassified and he will be RIF’d because Trump hates his agency. Hope your agency is one of those Trump likes.
Anonymous wrote:I have friends who I think are genuinely present dads who are in-house, but zero who are in big law. FWIW I am an SES government lawyer who is probably about 10 years older than you. I make over $200K now. I would choose my job over my old big law job 10 times out of 10. Even at my busiest work times, I will be at the thing I told my kids I’d be at; I will turn off my phone for a day if we have special plans. I could never have done that in big law. I had a partner track me down through my husband’s phone on a weekend when I didn’t answer my phone for a 10 minute period for a new “emergency” I had no reason to suspect was coming on a Sunday. No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure how this happened, but my husband and I are career feds (I’m a DOJ lawyer, hubs is a PhD scientist). We raised two kids in the close-in DC suburbs. Both are in college now. We live in a 1.7 M home and our combined net worth is $9M. It can be done if you save and invest wisely. I took 6 years off when the kids were small. Our starter home was very modest (but still close-in) and we learned to live on one government salary during those years. Spend time with your kid.
I don't think we're getting the full story here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever regrets the time they spend with their kids. You can absolutely live in a 2 bedroom condo and raise a happy and healthy child. You don't need some huge house.
2 bedroom condo on 300,000??
bet these folks are Democrats.
so out of touch with reality.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever regrets the time they spend with their kids. You can absolutely live in a 2 bedroom condo and raise a happy and healthy child. You don't need some huge house.
Anonymous wrote:We had 3 kids in day care and grade school and HHI was less than $300k, with the higher earner a fed salary. We have a mortgage that we can afford on one salary in the DMV area and they have college funds. Student loans were paid off just a few years ago. It’s doable. Keep the govt job and be there for ur wife and kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who I think are genuinely present dads who are in-house, but zero who are in big law. FWIW I am an SES government lawyer who is probably about 10 years older than you. I make over $200K now. I would choose my job over my old big law job 10 times out of 10. Even at my busiest work times, I will be at the thing I told my kids I’d be at; I will turn off my phone for a day if we have special plans. I could never have done that in big law. I had a partner track me down through my husband’s phone on a weekend when I didn’t answer my phone for a 10 minute period for a new “emergency” I had no reason to suspect was coming on a Sunday. No thanks.
My husband is a big law lawyer who is very very involved as a parent — goes to all the sports games etc. Thefe are two things that make it work — he is very disciplined. If he gets to a kids game early, he is working while the team is warming up, during half time, etc. He will park outside practices and work from the car. He is up every morning at 6 working. When we go on vacation, he works half days almost every day — used to be when kids napped but mow he will skip activities he doesn’t care for and work instead. The second way it works is he has basically no social life. I think he could have a bit of a social life if he stopped gojng to the gym or gave up our dog, since he probably spends 10-15 hours a week on those two things, but other than gym/dog, his life is 100% work and the kids.
So I think there are definitely ways to be an involved dad at big law (especially once you are more senior and can set your own schedule)—but it definitely takes compromises not everyone is willing to make.
Anonymous wrote:I have friends who I think are genuinely present dads who are in-house, but zero who are in big law. FWIW I am an SES government lawyer who is probably about 10 years older than you. I make over $200K now. I would choose my job over my old big law job 10 times out of 10. Even at my busiest work times, I will be at the thing I told my kids I’d be at; I will turn off my phone for a day if we have special plans. I could never have done that in big law. I had a partner track me down through my husband’s phone on a weekend when I didn’t answer my phone for a 10 minute period for a new “emergency” I had no reason to suspect was coming on a Sunday. No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Go back to biglaw. The wealth you create for your family will do a lot more for the kids long term than your being there a few extra hours a day. You will be able to afford private school, let them attend any college they want, get the best tutoring and supplementation if necessary, take them on incredible international vacations and expose them to all the world has to offer. You will still be there as a dad, you just will be working a lot more and won’t have much time for yourself and your hobbies.
I know all this because this is the path we chose and it has been worth it.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure how this happened, but my husband and I are career feds (I’m a DOJ lawyer, hubs is a PhD scientist). We raised two kids in the close-in DC suburbs. Both are in college now. We live in a 1.7 M home and our combined net worth is $9M. It can be done if you save and invest wisely. I took 6 years off when the kids were small. Our starter home was very modest (but still close-in) and we learned to live on one government salary during those years. Spend time with your kid.