Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I turned down a great job offer when my oldest was a baby because it would have required this arrangement for what we thought would be two years. I have had a very different career trajectory as a result - not bad, just different. If you are both employed and doing well, I don't think doubling one salary is worth giving up every weekday with a parent.
I think it’s absolutely fine in previous generations most children really didn’t see their dad much at all even when they were living in the same house and married my mom never saw her dad except Sundays at dinner that is it because he was working. I never saw my daddy either because he was working and there were several years when he did not live with us because there was a better job further away. It’s totally fine. People are making way too big a deal of this him seeing the kids every weekend is fine.
"I had an absentee father and turned out fine!"
A father that shows up financially and through technology every day and in person on the weekends isn't absentee
If you are encouraging other absentee fathers, you did not in fact, turn out fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I turned down a great job offer when my oldest was a baby because it would have required this arrangement for what we thought would be two years. I have had a very different career trajectory as a result - not bad, just different. If you are both employed and doing well, I don't think doubling one salary is worth giving up every weekday with a parent.
I think it’s absolutely fine in previous generations most children really didn’t see their dad much at all even when they were living in the same house and married my mom never saw her dad except Sundays at dinner that is it because he was working. I never saw my daddy either because he was working and there were several years when he did not live with us because there was a better job further away. It’s totally fine. People are making way too big a deal of this him seeing the kids every weekend is fine.
"I had an absentee father and turned out fine!"
If you are encouraging other absentee fathers, you did not in fact, turn out fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I turned down a great job offer when my oldest was a baby because it would have required this arrangement for what we thought would be two years. I have had a very different career trajectory as a result - not bad, just different. If you are both employed and doing well, I don't think doubling one salary is worth giving up every weekday with a parent.
I think it’s absolutely fine in previous generations most children really didn’t see their dad much at all even when they were living in the same house and married my mom never saw her dad except Sundays at dinner that is it because he was working. I never saw my daddy either because he was working and there were several years when he did not live with us because there was a better job further away. It’s totally fine. People are making way too big a deal of this him seeing the kids every weekend is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I turned down a great job offer when my oldest was a baby because it would have required this arrangement for what we thought would be two years. I have had a very different career trajectory as a result - not bad, just different. If you are both employed and doing well, I don't think doubling one salary is worth giving up every weekday with a parent.
I think it’s absolutely fine in previous generations most children really didn’t see their dad much at all even when they were living in the same house and married my mom never saw her dad except Sundays at dinner that is it because he was working. I never saw my daddy either because he was working and there were several years when he did not live with us because there was a better job further away. It’s totally fine. People are making way too big a deal of this him seeing the kids every weekend is fine.
Anonymous wrote:I turned down a great job offer when my oldest was a baby because it would have required this arrangement for what we thought would be two years. I have had a very different career trajectory as a result - not bad, just different. If you are both employed and doing well, I don't think doubling one salary is worth giving up every weekday with a parent.
Anonymous wrote:DH just got a job offer 3 hours away that pays double of what he gets now, and the job offers a house and a food stipend so $0 cost there. Work M-F, come back Fri-Sun every weekend. Our kids are 10 and 12. They will miss DH obviously but also do not want to switch schools and miss friends. What will this do to our life and relationship? We've been in separate bedrooms and not intimate for a decade.
Anonymous wrote:This was the exact arrangement that happened during my childhood but it was a pay cut after a layoff and failed job search.
As a kid, it was good. My dad brought a lot of tension into the house and a new job arrangement relieved it. I did have to change my activities. I was going to join a travel soccer club but instead did more low-key sports for a year or two then switched to school-based sports.
My parents had not been happy and the arrangement gave everyone space. Interestingly, when my dad retired moved back when I was in college, their relationship became a very deep loving and supportive friendship- like an ideal golden years relationship.
As someone going through an unwanted divorce now, I wish my DH had considered creative alternatives to blowing our family up.
One note of warning: people will make comments to you and the kids unless this is some kind of altruistic job, like medicine or firefighting. Let it roll off your back. I promise it is better than divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH just got a job offer 3 hours away that pays double of what he gets now, and the job offers a house and a food stipend so $0 cost there. Work M-F, come back Fri-Sun every weekend. Our kids are 10 and 12. They will miss DH obviously but also do not want to switch schools and miss friends. What will this do to our life and relationship? We've been in separate bedrooms and not intimate for a decade.
"We've been in separate bedrooms and not intimate for a decade."
Then nothing will change. Enjoy your alone time.