Does anyone regret leaving the work force?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Yes, I sent my kids sick to daycare all winter. I wish I stopped working before. I am entitled to my feelings. I couldn’t make it to one of the few events my daycare had and my kid would cry because I couldn’t come.
Yeah, I'm a FT WOHM/WFH mom who loves her job. I have no desire to become a SAHM. I don't think this is that cringe worthy. I was never comfortable with (and did not use) full-time group care for mine when they were infants and toddlers.
Ok you are very happy with your child care situation but how is this remotely applicable to OP with a 4 year old and an 8 year old?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Yes, I sent my kids sick to daycare all winter. I wish I stopped working before. I am entitled to my feelings. I couldn’t make it to one of the few events my daycare had and my kid would cry because I couldn’t come.
Yeah, I'm a FT WOHM/WFH mom who loves her job. I have no desire to become a SAHM. I don't think this is that cringe worthy. I was never comfortable with (and did not use) full-time group care for mine when they were infants and toddlers.
Ok you are very happy with your child care situation but how is this remotely applicable to OP with a 4 year old and an 8 year old?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Yes, I sent my kids sick to daycare all winter. I wish I stopped working before. I am entitled to my feelings. I couldn’t make it to one of the few events my daycare had and my kid would cry because I couldn’t come.
Yeah, I'm a FT WOHM/WFH mom who loves her job. I have no desire to become a SAHM. I don't think this is that cringe worthy. I was never comfortable with (and did not use) full-time group care for mine when they were infants and toddlers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Yes, I sent my kids sick to daycare all winter. I wish I stopped working before. I am entitled to my feelings. I couldn’t make it to one of the few events my daycare had and my kid would cry because I couldn’t come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
This is what is cringe worthy. You still have “mom guilt” over sending your kids to a daycare they loved? Do you even hear yourself? How that sounds to other people. Good thing you married a high earner to save your from your “guilt.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
You can’t group SAHMs together. Every mom is her unique person and another family’s situation has nothing to do with her.
Some people work for money. Others for personal fulfillment.
Some moms are ok with putting kids in daycare all day. I hated sending my kids to daycare even though my kids went to a great one and had a lot of fun with their friends. I still have mom guilt from those days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was out for 6 years when my kid was young. I kind of had to be and don't really regret it, but now I see that my social security benefits really took a loss from that empty space where I made no money to raise my social security benefits and also contributed nothing to my 401k.
Now I'm in my 50s and really need to make up my retirement savings. If we get divorced, I will be in a tough spot. Husband's salary went up of course ha as did his social security benefits while I did almost all the work at home. You don't really know what will happen to your marriage and you might need to take care of yourself at some point, so be wary is what I'm saying I guess. It might seem like an escape but that might just be temporary and then you have different, perhaps bigger, problem.
No, they are all rich and have perfect, loving, understanding husbands. Just ask them.
I have a rich, mostly perfect, loving, understanding husband, so I have no regrets or doubts. If that weren’t 100% true, I would feel differently, and wouldn’t have quit in the first place. In fact before I did I started a thread on this board very similar to this one, and I really had to stop and probe my security in my husband and marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Who is us?
Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is so cringe worthy. Full of self-congratulatory “retired” SAHM’s. I am a SAHM but you all make us sounds insufferable. Please stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was out for 6 years when my kid was young. I kind of had to be and don't really regret it, but now I see that my social security benefits really took a loss from that empty space where I made no money to raise my social security benefits and also contributed nothing to my 401k.
Now I'm in my 50s and really need to make up my retirement savings. If we get divorced, I will be in a tough spot. Husband's salary went up of course ha as did his social security benefits while I did almost all the work at home. You don't really know what will happen to your marriage and you might need to take care of yourself at some point, so be wary is what I'm saying I guess. It might seem like an escape but that might just be temporary and then you have different, perhaps bigger, problem.
No, they are all rich and have perfect, loving, understanding husbands. Just ask them.