Anonymous wrote:I’m a physician, and I knew I could go back to at the same salary whenever I wanted to as long as I didn’t quit completely. I worked 10-15 hours a month for a few years and then went back part time. DH was in a higher paying specialty than mine, so we didn’t have to make any financial sacrifices.
I have no idea how this works in other professions, but can you offer to cover on weekends or when people are sick or on vacation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Yes, every parent is a fit to parent by virtue of being a parent. Anyone who is paid to provide childcare could never be as fit. 🙄
Of course this isn’t true. I’m way more qualified to raise my own kids vs some kid making $22/hour. YMMV.
Why are you more qualified?
Because I’m intelligent and extremely vested. I have three kids at top colleges who are kind, loving, empathetic kids so I’m proud of my work and investment in their lives. It worked in my case, again, YMMV.
And no paid childcare worker is extremely intelligent or educated? I went to Williams for college and Columbia for grad school. My husband went to Harvard. I have three kids who I love and care about. I am not a SAHM nor are many of my peers. Our nanny, who is paid a lot more than $22, is patient, kind, empathetic, and able to enforce boundaries. I reject the idea that my children or any children are materially worse off because their mother works at Latham and Watkins et al instead of staying home with them all day. There are many SAHMs who are overwhelmed and struggle to meet the constant demands of parenting 24/7. I feel bad for them and their kids. I also know SAHMs with Nannie’s who were very checked out when their kids were little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Yes, every parent is a fit to parent by virtue of being a parent. Anyone who is paid to provide childcare could never be as fit. 🙄
Of course this isn’t true. I’m way more qualified to raise my own kids vs some kid making $22/hour. YMMV.
Why are you more qualified?
Because I’m intelligent and extremely vested. I have three kids at top colleges who are kind, loving, empathetic kids so I’m proud of my work and investment in their lives. It worked in my case, again, YMMV.
it's more stressful academically, more commitments with activities ie sports involving watching games like all the time + practices. The craziness of hormones appears. They aren't doing everything you want or tell them. Even the best behaved kid will want their independence to a point you never gave them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Yes, every parent is a fit to parent by virtue of being a parent. Anyone who is paid to provide childcare could never be as fit. 🙄
Of course this isn’t true. I’m way more qualified to raise my own kids vs some kid making $22/hour. YMMV.
Why are you more qualified?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Yes, every parent is a fit to parent by virtue of being a parent. Anyone who is paid to provide childcare could never be as fit. 🙄
Of course this isn’t true. I’m way more qualified to raise my own kids vs some kid making $22/hour. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Yes, every parent is a fit to parent by virtue of being a parent. Anyone who is paid to provide childcare could never be as fit. 🙄
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my
Why would a random daycare worker be better at taking care of kids than their own parent?
Because some have training and years of experience with hundreds of kids. One of my favorites had training in early childhood education and spent the last 14 years in a 18 month to 2 year room. She was warm, knew how to engage the kids, and knew what was reasonable to expect from them (behavior wise and tasks). My picky eating, not like to sleep child at home ate well and napped on a regular schedule at daycare. I would not have believed it except I left work early or would pop in unexpectedly and would see it with my own eyes.
My ego is not so big as to think that I am the only one who could do a good job taking care my children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want strangers raising my children.
They're probably better at it than you.