
It will get better. I remember, in the not so distant past, when all three of our kids were young (I had 3 kids in 4 years

) and DH's older son was still in Elem school. Oh, my, how we struggled. We were barely making it as it was and then DH left his job and moved us all to our hometown because my stepson was having issues. Our town is tiny and the job market is non existant. DH's years of special training in technology was useless, the only job available was in a furniture factory. I try hard not to resent those years but it's hard, there were days where I wanted to walk away from it all.
BUT DH finally wised up and realized he had to go back on the road to work. He's making more now than he ever has, the kids and I travel to many of the places he goes to work so my kids are seeing so much, and I have really learned how to budget so many things that seemed impossible.
I remember wondering which bills to pay, and I remember living without a phone and without cable (actually, that helped us save more than anything else - the kids watched videos and saw NO commercials so they had NO "gimmies" LOL), If I could go back, the one thing I would do would be to start family vacations earlier. It never seemed we could afford them but, I think, if we'd juggled a little differently we could have. Those vacations have made us much closer, it gives us something to look forward to instead of plodding day to day and then wondering where the year went. I went back to work when my youngest was 8 months but it only lasted about 18 months. I ended up in the ER in a full blown panic attack. I was working long hours and, still, some months had to "borrow" from DH's check to pay the childcare on two of the kids. It was ridiculous. But, I wanted them to have somewhere to go and play with other kids since no one does playgroups here like they did where we moved from, and (sad but true) I knew it helped them to be away from me. I was really struggling with sadness and anger at the situation we were in.
The good thing is, though, that once the youngest was old enough for full time school I went back to work. I didn't double our income but I get a nice little chunk that I have designated the "kid" fund. I buy most of their clothing and christmas/birthday, I cover our family health insurance (I get it at 1/3 of what DH would have to pay and the coverage is waaay better), and I put a lot of it up this year for a "whiz bang" vacation to Disney. It's "budget" I'm sure to some on the board but, for us, it's more extravagant than the beach vacations we've gotten used to.
It does get better, in the mean time I would encourage you to keep doing inexpensive and free things with your kids. Look for other moms that might be in a similar bind - could you form a playgroup swap so the kids could play at one house one week and another the next? It would give you a "free day" to concentrate on you, sometimes taking care of yourself gets pushed so far back it's off the stove but it is SO important. Encourage your DH to stop looking for his old job and start looking for ANY job. Even weekends at a fast food place or retail store would bring in some money. As someone else said, if he knows sports "umping" can pay pretty well. I think it gets $60 or $75 a game here for PEE WEE because these people take their sports seriously LOL One bit of advice I've heard from Dave Ramsey (we aren't really followers but I've caught his show a time or two) is to look around your home and see what REALLY gets used. If it's just sitting there, it has no value to you at all (as in, it wasn't something you inherited or something given to you that holds a strong sentimental attachment) SELL IT. I actually did this last fall and made about $400 just by getting rid of pieces of old furniture we had sitting in our basement. I knew we weren't going to use them again so I had DH haul them to the carport, cleaned them up, took pictures and posted them to craigslist. Bunk beds the kids had outgrown - gone, old entertainment center that we had no room for anymore - gone, toys that the kids no longer played with but weren't important enough to save for "when they have their own kids" - GONE! So, it did two things. First I got $400 of "found" money that I tossed into the Christmas fund and, second, I reclaimed a chunk of space in our house. Everytime I go to the basement and don't see a pile of junk in the corner, I feel better
