Anonymous wrote:It's not easy, but it's doable. Few key things, at least for me:
1) Sleep train right at 4 months. The miserable parents I knew were still getting up multiple times a night (!!) with their 18 month olds (!!) Four months is bad enough.
2) Equal partner. Truly, equal. Not "does his half when you remind him but you have to keep track of everything"
3) Short commute. Ours is 35 mins, and that's as high as I would go.
4) Actually work 40 hours a week. Both of you. Working a late night once every week or two when you're childless, just because something came up, or because you weren't all that productive during the day, is no big deal. When you have a kid, it's a PITA. I would say an occasional hour or two of work after hours can be okay IF it's flexible, and you can do it after the baby goes to bed.
5) Parental leave. Both my husband and I have 12 weeks of leave (each), and the majority is paid. We took every last day. Two weeks together at the beginning, then 10 weeks just me, then 10 weeks just him. That way, by the time kid is off to childcare, he's also sleep trained (see point 1) and you're both getting full nights of sleep.
With all that? We are loving parenthood and planning for a large family!
Anonymous wrote:It's not easy, but it's doable. Few key things, at least for me:
1) Sleep train right at 4 months. The miserable parents I knew were still getting up multiple times a night (!!) with their 18 month olds (!!) Four months is bad enough.
2) Equal partner. Truly, equal. Not "does his half when you remind him but you have to keep track of everything"
3) Short commute. Ours is 35 mins, and that's as high as I would go.
4) Actually work 40 hours a week. Both of you. Working a late night once every week or two when you're childless, just because something came up, or because you weren't all that productive during the day, is no big deal. When you have a kid, it's a PITA. I would say an occasional hour or two of work after hours can be okay IF it's flexible, and you can do it after the baby goes to bed.
5) Parental leave. Both my husband and I have 12 weeks of leave (each), and the majority is paid. We took every last day. Two weeks together at the beginning, then 10 weeks just me, then 10 weeks just him. That way, by the time kid is off to childcare, he's also sleep trained (see point 1) and you're both getting full nights of sleep.
With all that? We are loving parenthood and planning for a large family!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Literally the most important thing to consider: will your spouse be a 50/50 partner or not? Many married couples decide to have kids and then one parent ends up doing 80% of the work (I’m talking about in families where there are two working parents.)
That is...not desirable or sustainable. The only way it works (without either spouse feeling resentment) is if there is a somewhat equal balance of both childcare and house related duties.
This is maybe one of the better points made. And being "excited to be a dad!!" does not an equal partner make. Have some really tough convos about how you will prioritize both your careers (if that's important to you). Sometimes it's hard to know, I've heard of moms where the husband helped around the house before baby but after baby had a lot of assumptions on what moms do vs dad. So how are your partners assumptions/what are their experiences in your family of origin?
Anonymous wrote:Literally the most important thing to consider: will your spouse be a 50/50 partner or not? Many married couples decide to have kids and then one parent ends up doing 80% of the work (I’m talking about in families where there are two working parents.)
That is...not desirable or sustainable. The only way it works (without either spouse feeling resentment) is if there is a somewhat equal balance of both childcare and house related duties.
Anonymous wrote:Our family is also not struggling, either before Covid or even now, but that is because of deliberate choices we have made to make sure we can manage.
Our household income is $220k and my husband travels for work constantly (even now!). Even before Covid, I worked from home full time. We chose an in home daycare 5-10 minutes from our house, depending on how many traffic lights you hit. We only have one child. We have biweekly house cleaning, no yard work and I make simple meals during the week and a more elaborate dish with leftovers on the weekend.
Life really isn’t hard, but I made sure not to take on things I couldn’t handle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not miserable at all. Key factors:
- WFH 2x a week, fairly flexible hours the rest of the week to avoid traffic
- A great nanny, and a Mom nearby who could be around and help
Oh, AND
- An equal partner with respect to childcare and housework
+1
I have been able to work remotely for years. My mom lives with us and I have a cleaning lady who comes twice a week and a cooking/prep lady who comes for 3 hours on the weekend.
When kids were little, a nanny came and worked under the eagle eye of my mom. When they were 3 years old, we put them in a montessori school (paid full time, but used it 1/2 day for socialization only). Nanny came for part of the day. Mom supervised. I had basically 4 backups for childcare. Me, my mom, nanny and montessori school.
DH is very involved dad and does not hesitate to help or to she'll the money out to outsource.
Kids are in HS now, and I still have the cleaning lady come. My cooking person now cooks and delivers...slightly more work and inconvenience during the pandemic but no where near what employed people without childcare are facing.
Oh, also, for very long time, all my earnings was going towards paying for help...All. this was for years. We do not live in an expensive neighborhood of MoCo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a 6 y.o and 2 y.o and both work and have no local family. It's totally fine (I mean, we are busy and it's hard work but we didn't expect having kids would involve much sitting on the beach, sipping margaritas). The KEY is that both of us have flexible schedules. We both work a lot but can almost control our schedules fully except for morning meetings and an occasional afternoon meeting. Our hhi is $300k and we had kids in our late 30's though. In non-covid times, we employed a nanny ($60k) and had no other help except cleaners twice a month. In covid times, we have literally had no help except cleaners every 2-3 months. We are both healthy and energetic, which I think makes a big difference. We never had the kids in a million activities (only one each), and plan to continue that after things normalize. We live close in but in a rowhouse condo, so no big house and yard, and our kids will go to public school (DCPS).
Lol. It's fine to have kids in the DC region provided you both have flexible jobs making $300k and can hire a nanny for $60/year. What's the big deal, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not miserable at all. Key factors:
- WFH 2x a week, fairly flexible hours the rest of the week to avoid traffic
- A great nanny, and a Mom nearby who could be around and help
Oh, AND
- An equal partner with respect to childcare and housework