Anonymous wrote:We’re rich and I’m on maternity leave right now. True, I’m not stressed. I’ve known money stresses and they’re terrible.
But I am so. bored. The meaninglessness swallows you whole. Every problem, solved with money. Lacking in real problems, I find myself fixating on nonsense small things wrong with my house like a bit of missing trim or places where the paint isn’t straight. Also wildly overplanning eldest DD’s birthday party. Maybe I’m just a boring person but it’s not fun at all for me to be idle.
Anonymous wrote:Last time I checked, we were still in America. Money makes so many things easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I know too many kids who are being raised by nannies and it’s not pretty.
You can be a rich SAHM with a nanny just to give a hand. That is what I would love!!
I am a rich SAHM with a trust-fund from my biological maternal grandmother, and I outsource as much as I can (except childcare) for three households - ours, ILs and parents. ILs and parents live close to us and we want them to be able to spend quality family time with us, take care of their health and not be stressed about doing routine stuff in their homes. We have put in place a cleaning service, yard maintenance, handyman, cooking/prep person, yoga instructor and a masseuse for our parents. They are pretty healthy and active people, financially stable, fiscally responsible, who are retired and maybe do not need all the help that we give them now, but, we want to make sure that we have thought through everything that can make their lives easier and healthier so that they spend more time with us and our kids. I think services that buys you more time with your family is a great use of money. For our income, we are pretty average materially (homes, cars, clothes). Our money is spent on less visible things like - organic food, vacations, hobbies, staffing. In another 10-15 years, if we see the need we will also hire a part-time chauffeur/attendant for them.
This is confusing. Your grandmother left you a trust fund with enough to take care of three households but didn't leave your mother, her daughter, anything? Hence the need for you to supply her lawn care service and masseuse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the ones that are working hard for it. Sure for the ones that inherited it. Money makes life easier - unless the trade off is your time.
+1000000
My sister works 60 hours a week. They have an incredible house, cars, designer clothes, and take vacations.
I am a SAHM. Our house is modest, we have one car, and my clothes are from Old Navy.
My time with my boys is more valuable.
What about the SAHMs who also have the big homes, lots of help and travel? You aren’t envious of them?
New poster here. No I’m not envious of rich SAHMs at all. I’m jealous of the women that have it all: a good marriage, a couple of kids and an interesting, stimulating career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the ones that are working hard for it. Sure for the ones that inherited it. Money makes life easier - unless the trade off is your time.
+1000000
My sister works 60 hours a week. They have an incredible house, cars, designer clothes, and take vacations.
I am a SAHM. Our house is modest, we have one car, and my clothes are from Old Navy.
My time with my boys is more valuable.
What about the SAHMs who also have the big homes, lots of help and travel? You aren’t envious of them?
New poster here. No I’m not envious of rich SAHMs at all. I’m jealous of the women that have it all: a good marriage, a couple of kids and an interesting, stimulating career.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the ones that are working hard for it. Sure for the ones that inherited it. Money makes life easier - unless the trade off is your time.
+1. I have a few friends who make a ton of money but rarely see their kids and seem to work nonstop. I have even more friends with husbands who make a ton of money but they are NEVER home. I do not envy that. But family money or the rare huge salary in a cushy job, yes, for sure.
That’s a good point ... I have two friends who are SAHM’s, one married to a Biglaw partner, the other to a higher-up in consulting. Big $$$ jobs and the dads are basically never home and also travel for work a lot. Now granted - they have a high income so the SAHM is able to hire out for this and that. Cleaning services, lots of babysitters and mothers’ helpers, meal deliveries, etc. But managing all that - ensuring that one of your babysitters can come last minute when your husband gets called out of town but you have an evening PT conference or some other obligation - is stressful in and of itself.
[i]So do I wish we had more money? Of course! But I’m also happy I get to see my husband (a GS-15 fed) on evenings and weekends, and that he likes his job, and gets to do his actual work without having to get into the politics of “supervising” or project management. Everything’s a trade-off.
The only thing more stressful is same scenario, but you are not SAHM with high HHI.