Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are a whiner. Seriously. This is not a big deal. People in my family are doctors. Doctors today have easier schedules than previous generations. Doctors dads did zero kid stuff. My mom saw her dad once a week at Sunday dinner. My cousins never saw their dads. You must be millennial or Gen Z. (I am late 40s).
Grow up! Your husband has a high paying, stable, and noble profession. Most people deal with career uncertainty their whole lives in other kinds of work. You are acting like a toddler.
Being a doctor doesn't mean requiring spouse to sacrifice their personal and professional lives or kids to miss out on an involved father.
I had a physician Dad and there was the occasional holiday shift and long hours, but nothing this pervasive.
I have two friends from high school who are doctors one a dad of two, the other a mom of four, and they don't work shifts like this either.
Anonymous wrote:OP, when you say midnight shift, what does that mean? What hours, exactly?
Anonymous wrote:He's a physician, presumably? My friend that's an ER doc perfers the PM rotations.
Hire help, easy peasy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are a whiner. Seriously. This is not a big deal. People in my family are doctors. Doctors today have easier schedules than previous generations. Doctors dads did zero kid stuff. My mom saw her dad once a week at Sunday dinner. My cousins never saw their dads. You must be millennial or Gen Z. (I am late 40s).
Grow up! Your husband has a high paying, stable, and noble profession. Most people deal with career uncertainty their whole lives in other kinds of work. You are acting like a toddler.
Being a doctor doesn't mean requiring spouse to sacrifice their personal and professional lives or kids to miss out on an involved father.
I had a physician Dad and there was the occasional holiday shift and long hours, but nothing this pervasive.
I have two friends from high school who are doctors one a dad of two, the other a mom of four, and they don't work shifts like this either.
There are so many different doctors. Are your friends in family practice? They work regular 9-4 jobs with occasional late night charts. There are highly specialized doctors who might work office house with rotating schedules, there ER doctors, there are locum medical personnel who travels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are a whiner. Seriously. This is not a big deal. People in my family are doctors. Doctors today have easier schedules than previous generations. Doctors dads did zero kid stuff. My mom saw her dad once a week at Sunday dinner. My cousins never saw their dads. You must be millennial or Gen Z. (I am late 40s).
Grow up! Your husband has a high paying, stable, and noble profession. Most people deal with career uncertainty their whole lives in other kinds of work. You are acting like a toddler.
Being a doctor doesn't mean requiring spouse to sacrifice their personal and professional lives or kids to miss out on an involved father.
I had a physician Dad and there was the occasional holiday shift and long hours, but nothing this pervasive.
I have two friends from high school who are doctors one a dad of two, the other a mom of four, and they don't work shifts like this either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are a whiner. Seriously. This is not a big deal. People in my family are doctors. Doctors today have easier schedules than previous generations. Doctors dads did zero kid stuff. My mom saw her dad once a week at Sunday dinner. My cousins never saw their dads. You must be millennial or Gen Z. (I am late 40s).
Grow up! Your husband has a high paying, stable, and noble profession. Most people deal with career uncertainty their whole lives in other kinds of work. You are acting like a toddler.
Being a doctor doesn't mean requiring spouse to sacrifice their personal and professional lives or kids to miss out on an involved father.
Anonymous wrote:Money buys wants but doesn't meet needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are a whiner. Seriously. This is not a big deal. People in my family are doctors. Doctors today have easier schedules than previous generations. Doctors dads did zero kid stuff. My mom saw her dad once a week at Sunday dinner. My cousins never saw their dads. You must be millennial or Gen Z. (I am late 40s).
Grow up! Your husband has a high paying, stable, and noble profession. Most people deal with career uncertainty their whole lives in other kinds of work. You are acting like a toddler.
Being a doctor doesn't mean requiring spouse to sacrifice their personal and professional lives or kids to miss out on an involved father.