Anonymous wrote:My kids were 9 when the pandemic started, they are 14 now, for 5 years I was fully remote and now back 3 days a week. This is something I am extremely thankful for in life, I remember how rushed and stressful the years prior to 2019 were for us. I wish more working parents can be given flexible hours or WFH arrangements, it’s good for the society when children are with their parents instead of spending long hours in daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you worked at a company that outright banned telework and required you be on site 42.5 hours per week, monitored by badging out with time cards that are a felony to misrepresent on, I don’t want to hear how you managed pre covid. Jesus christ, people. Your quite cushy lives in 2019 are not comparable in this situation. Not at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you worked at a company that outright banned telework and required you be on site 42.5 hours per week, monitored by badging out with time cards that are a felony to misrepresent on, I don’t want to hear how you managed pre covid. Jesus christ, people. Your quite cushy lives in 2019 are not comparable in this situation. Not at all.
I did work in this situation pre-Covid. The difference then was that there were plenty of daycares. My kids were in from 8 am - 6 pm every week day. Now daycares etc are harder to find, but hopefully they will restart with everyone RTO.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you worked at a company that outright banned telework and required you be on site 42.5 hours per week, monitored by badging out with time cards that are a felony to misrepresent on, I don’t want to hear how you managed pre covid. Jesus christ, people. Your quite cushy lives in 2019 are not comparable in this situation. Not at all.
Anonymous wrote:Others are managing RTO without a village just like any other parents who work in person and don’t have a village. Having kids always has been a sacrifice for most people. You just had a reprieve for a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should manage childcare for RTO the same way you manage it for WFH. You are not supposed to be dropping off and picking up on the clock. Nor are you supposed to be caring for your kids at home. You were supposed to have a childcare plan this whole time. WFH is not your childcare plan. Why are you just now trying to figure it out.
Oh FFS! You can't be so obtuseas to not understand the concept of a commute.
How do you think people got to work prior to COVID making everyone feel entitled to WFH? Do you think people were flown into work on the wings of angels? Are commutes a brand-new thing that just occurred a few weeks ago? I can see where you feel it sucks that the gig is up, but this is not impossible to navigate. It just may be impossible to navigate 100% on your terms.
Before Covid, people had years to make childcare plans. I was given 3 days notice to RTO. That makes it difficult for some to figure something out that covers the extra time spent commuting, especially mid school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should manage childcare for RTO the same way you manage it for WFH. You are not supposed to be dropping off and picking up on the clock. Nor are you supposed to be caring for your kids at home. You were supposed to have a childcare plan this whole time. WFH is not your childcare plan. Why are you just now trying to figure it out.
Oh FFS! You can't be so obtuseas to not understand the concept of a commute.
Why oh why do 35 year olds not understand that there was a life before Covid. We had commutes then, too, sweetie pie. Sometimes over an hour. We figured it out, you will too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should manage childcare for RTO the same way you manage it for WFH. You are not supposed to be dropping off and picking up on the clock. Nor are you supposed to be caring for your kids at home. You were supposed to have a childcare plan this whole time. WFH is not your childcare plan. Why are you just now trying to figure it out.
Oh FFS! You can't be so obtuseas to not understand the concept of a commute.
How do you think people got to work prior to COVID making everyone feel entitled to WFH? Do you think people were flown into work on the wings of angels? Are commutes a brand-new thing that just occurred a few weeks ago? I can see where you feel it sucks that the gig is up, but this is not impossible to navigate. It just may be impossible to navigate 100% on your terms.