Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how a regular job can expect you to relocate for 3 months without frequent opportunities to come home, especially when you have young children. What line of work is this?
I'm saying this as a military spouse. What can be so encompassing that you can't tell them you need to come home every other weekend Friday-Monday?
I can come home on the weekends, but when I'm at a job site in an area where it takes 2 hours to drive to the airport, plus the flight time, and then drive home from either Dulles or Reagan, and the only flight back requires me to leave pretty early on Sunday, it just isn't ideal. I am going to come home at least once and my DH and the kids will come out there a couple of times. It isn't something like Boston or Philly where I can get the late flight home after work on Friday and then the 6 am back Monday morning. And I need to not be prepared and not exhausted come Monday morning. The logistics are not good.
If you can get home once and they can come out there once, things will be fine. Actually, they will be fine even if you don't get a personal visit in those 3 months. Your DH and kids will get into their routine and, honestly, it will probably be harder on you than on them. I don't mean that in a disparaging way!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not perpetuating anything. I never said dads aren't capable. But biologically, little kids want their moms. I'm not saying OP shouldn't go either just that it's different from dad leaving 3 months. It will be harder on the kids with her gone than him, that's just how it is with kids.
That may be how it is in your family. As a teacher, I know many families who truly co-parent, or where the dad is the default parent. The kids in these circumstances are connected to their dads in the same way your kids are connected to you.
Anonymous wrote:YOu guys know that military families and even state department families on some postings do this all the time right? And for longer than three months? It seems so unbelievably naive and sheltered to think this is unheard of. For some it really is the norm and you know what, they survive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how a regular job can expect you to relocate for 3 months without frequent opportunities to come home, especially when you have young children. What line of work is this?
I'm saying this as a military spouse. What can be so encompassing that you can't tell them you need to come home every other weekend Friday-Monday?
I can come home on the weekends, but when I'm at a job site in an area where it takes 2 hours to drive to the airport, plus the flight time, and then drive home from either Dulles or Reagan, and the only flight back requires me to leave pretty early on Sunday, it just isn't ideal. I am going to come home at least once and my DH and the kids will come out there a couple of times. It isn't something like Boston or Philly where I can get the late flight home after work on Friday and then the 6 am back Monday morning. And I need to not be prepared and not exhausted come Monday morning. The logistics are not good.
Anonymous wrote:Three months will believe an eternity for the kids. Can't believe a mother would do this.
This is unheard of.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not perpetuating anything. I never said dads aren't capable. But biologically, little kids want their moms. I'm not saying OP shouldn't go either just that it's different from dad leaving 3 months. It will be harder on the kids with her gone than him, that's just how it is with kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH just returned from 5 months away. He came back two weekends and we went for a week (although he wasn't available to spend any significant amount of time with us) kids are 4 and 6. It was tough at first but we did fine. It's no big deal.
Fair or not I think there's a huge difference between dad going for 5 months and mom going.
How so? We both play significant roles in our children's lives and we both work full time. Sure it might seem harder for the parent leaving but I don't see how mom leaving is any more difficult than dad at this age. Sure, maybe if you were dealing with nursing infants but that's not the case.
Because mom is mom. Even when dad is great, kids want their moms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH just returned from 5 months away. He came back two weekends and we went for a week (although he wasn't available to spend any significant amount of time with us) kids are 4 and 6. It was tough at first but we did fine. It's no big deal.
Fair or not I think there's a huge difference between dad going for 5 months and mom going.
How so? We both play significant roles in our children's lives and we both work full time. Sure it might seem harder for the parent leaving but I don't see how mom leaving is any more difficult than dad at this age. Sure, maybe if you were dealing with nursing infants but that's not the case.
Because mom is mom. Even when dad is great, kids want their moms.