Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, wake up and smell the coffee. This isn’t 2020.
Right. Nowadays women can openly fleece their employers and the taxpayer.
Men don’t have children? Your misogyny is showing, in addition to your lack of intelligence.
Sadly, the burden of child rearing is on women in most countries including the US. Remember when you took maternity leave and your husband took a few weeks max? That was your own misogyny showing when you went along with that.
My husband took 4 months of paternity leave with each of our kids. Troll harder next time.
I don’t know a single man who did that and I’m a millennial.
You don’t know many highly compensated people who are valued by their workplaces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I WFH sometimes and believe me, I never WANT my toddler to be home from daycare.
Agree the norm should be to have childcare coverage during working hours.
When there are multiple young children in daycare just please be aware that sick days are frequent, especially if one kid is an infant getting illnesses for the first time. So the employee in question may not have much choice, and you may actually be getting more work out of them if the choice is WFH day vs. sick day with no work.
Yea but before covid and the advent of WFH these days were far fewer. Clearly lots of mothers are taking advantage.
Anonymous wrote:I agree 100 percent with the OP. It’s not possible or fair either to your children or your employer. One or the other is getting the shaft - probably both.
WFH is a scam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, wake up and smell the coffee. This isn’t 2020.
Right. Nowadays women can openly fleece their employers and the taxpayer.
Men don’t have children? Your misogyny is showing, in addition to your lack of intelligence.
Sadly, the burden of child rearing is on women in most countries including the US. Remember when you took maternity leave and your husband took a few weeks max? That was your own misogyny showing when you went along with that.
My husband took 4 months of paternity leave with each of our kids. Troll harder next time.
I don’t know a single man who did that and I’m a millennial.
Millennial parent here. 4 months is on the high side (although great!) but I know dads who have taken 2-3 months paid. I work in an industry that is forward-leaning on paid leave. In addition, feds get 12 weeks paid so that's about 3 months.
That’s not normal. My husband got a few days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, wake up and smell the coffee. This isn’t 2020.
Right. Nowadays women can openly fleece their employers and the taxpayer.
Men don’t have children? Your misogyny is showing, in addition to your lack of intelligence.
Sadly, the burden of child rearing is on women in most countries including the US. Remember when you took maternity leave and your husband took a few weeks max? That was your own misogyny showing when you went along with that.
My husband took 4 months of paternity leave with each of our kids. Troll harder next time.
I don’t know a single man who did that and I’m a millennial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know zero parents who WFH without childcare. Zero. Even parents of older kids (10+) have childcare. If one of their kids is home while they’re working, it 100% was not intentional.
Most parents of kids ages 2+ don’t want their kids home. They want socialization and enrichment. I would feel guilty as heck keeping my kids home all day so I could ignore them and sit on my computer, just to save $.
In the summers, I pay more than I earn to put my 3 kids in high quality camps. They love it and it makes me feel good knowing they’re having fun with friends and learning new things while I’m working.
Strange. We have an older kid and never paid for child care. Your issue is three kids. Much easier with fewer kids.
How did you get free childcare just because you had one kid? I had an only for 6 years and I paid through the nose including $2500+/mo infant daycare.
I agree there’s something strange here but it’s not PP.
Let's see, we had a SAHP for the early years as child care was more than their take home after expenses. Then, another parent was a WAHP which is the discussion. Once kids are middle school they don't need constant care.
LOL this is so misleading and irrelevant to this discussion. "We never paid for childcare!" No, you had a SAHP. Sit down.
Anonymous wrote:The “take advantage” myth again?
Look, remote work is here permanently. It’s not changing. Deal with it. The way we work has shifted for good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know zero parents who WFH without childcare. Zero. Even parents of older kids (10+) have childcare. If one of their kids is home while they’re working, it 100% was not intentional.
Most parents of kids ages 2+ don’t want their kids home. They want socialization and enrichment. I would feel guilty as heck keeping my kids home all day so I could ignore them and sit on my computer, just to save $.
In the summers, I pay more than I earn to put my 3 kids in high quality camps. They love it and it makes me feel good knowing they’re having fun with friends and learning new things while I’m working.
Strange. We have an older kid and never paid for child care. Your issue is three kids. Much easier with fewer kids.
How did you get free childcare just because you had one kid? I had an only for 6 years and I paid through the nose including $2500+/mo infant daycare.
I agree there’s something strange here but it’s not PP.
Let's see, we had a SAHP for the early years as child care was more than their take home after expenses. Then, another parent was a WAHP which is the discussion. Once kids are middle school they don't need constant care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know zero parents who WFH without childcare. Zero. Even parents of older kids (10+) have childcare. If one of their kids is home while they’re working, it 100% was not intentional.
Most parents of kids ages 2+ don’t want their kids home. They want socialization and enrichment. I would feel guilty as heck keeping my kids home all day so I could ignore them and sit on my computer, just to save $.
In the summers, I pay more than I earn to put my 3 kids in high quality camps. They love it and it makes me feel good knowing they’re having fun with friends and learning new things while I’m working.
Strange. We have an older kid and never paid for child care. Your issue is three kids. Much easier with fewer kids.
How did you get free childcare just because you had one kid? I had an only for 6 years and I paid through the nose including $2500+/mo infant daycare.
I agree there’s something strange here but it’s not PP.
Let's see, we had a SAHP for the early years as child care was more than their take home after expenses. Then, another parent was a WAHP which is the discussion. Once kids are middle school they don't need constant care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know zero parents who WFH without childcare. Zero. Even parents of older kids (10+) have childcare. If one of their kids is home while they’re working, it 100% was not intentional.
Most parents of kids ages 2+ don’t want their kids home. They want socialization and enrichment. I would feel guilty as heck keeping my kids home all day so I could ignore them and sit on my computer, just to save $.
In the summers, I pay more than I earn to put my 3 kids in high quality camps. They love it and it makes me feel good knowing they’re having fun with friends and learning new things while I’m working.
Strange. We have an older kid and never paid for child care. Your issue is three kids. Much easier with fewer kids.
How did you get free childcare just because you had one kid? I had an only for 6 years and I paid through the nose including $2500+/mo infant daycare.
I agree there’s something strange here but it’s not PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The “take advantage” myth again?
Look, remote work is here permanently. It’s not changing. Deal with it. The way we work has shifted for good.
No one said remote work isn’t here to stay. No one is protesting that. But to work remotely, you must have child care. Obviously. It’s in every remote work contract I’ve ever seen, with the exception of during the height of the pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know zero parents who WFH without childcare. Zero. Even parents of older kids (10+) have childcare. If one of their kids is home while they’re working, it 100% was not intentional.
Most parents of kids ages 2+ don’t want their kids home. They want socialization and enrichment. I would feel guilty as heck keeping my kids home all day so I could ignore them and sit on my computer, just to save $.
In the summers, I pay more than I earn to put my 3 kids in high quality camps. They love it and it makes me feel good knowing they’re having fun with friends and learning new things while I’m working.
Strange. We have an older kid and never paid for child care. Your issue is three kids. Much easier with fewer kids.