What a pretentious, mean-spirited post. are you serious? I hope you've made yourself feel better.![]()
Agreed! I find that people who make such comments are typically insecure and feel the need to build themselves up by way of bringing others down.
What a pretentious, mean-spirited post. are you serious? I hope you've made yourself feel better.![]()

Question?
If you are a SAHM did you decide to go back to work after your kids started school full-time? My DH wants me to get a FT job ASAP after both of ours start first grade. Actually he would like me to go back sooner, but I love being able to be home with them and will be able to take DD to kindergarten this Fall and pick her up from school as well. I work two nights a week right now but financially we cant do this forever. Daycare is just too expensive to put both in AND work and be able to pick them up and drop off and take time off work if they are sick, etc.
So, I would like to hear from those who did go back after they started school and how it went personally. Not to take over the thread or anything just wondering if this is something some Moms who choose to stay home at first do.
As for the "who is raising my child" comment. Well, I guess it does not really bother me because I don't feel that way. I don't feel like if my child goes to daycare he is being RAISED by someone else. I am raising him. He is 5 and has been in daycare all his life. I know for a fact that he knows things and learns things there that I would never in my life think to teach him. I am not a teacher, they are. I send my child to a highly sought after daycare where all the teachers have 4 year education degrees. So to me, I don't feel like they are raising me child, rather they are educating him. For us, it works out great. But I do understand how people get offended by that comment. Being a mom is hard no matter how you look at it. There is no reason to make yourself feel better by trying to bring down someone else's decision on how they run their house.
Kristine
What a pretentious, mean-spirited post. are you serious? I hope you've made yourself feel better.![]()

Question?
If you are a SAHM did you decide to go back to work after your kids started school full-time? My DH wants me to get a FT job ASAP after both of ours start first grade. Actually he would like me to go back sooner, but I love being able to be home with them and will be able to take DD to kindergarten this Fall and pick her up from school as well. I work two nights a week right now but financially we cant do this forever. Daycare is just too expensive to put both in AND work and be able to pick them up and drop off and take time off work if they are sick, etc.
So, I would like to hear from those who did go back after they started school and how it went personally. Not to take over the thread or anything just wondering if this is something some Moms who choose to stay home at first do.
that the days fly by. Question?
If you are a SAHM did you decide to go back to work after your kids started school full-time? My DH wants me to get a FT job ASAP after both of ours start first grade. Actually he would like me to go back sooner, but I love being able to be home with them and will be able to take DD to kindergarten this Fall and pick her up from school as well. I work two nights a week right now but financially we cant do this forever. Daycare is just too expensive to put both in AND work and be able to pick them up and drop off and take time off work if they are sick, etc.
So, I would like to hear from those who did go back after they started school and how it went personally. Not to take over the thread or anything just wondering if this is something some Moms who choose to stay home at first do.
No judgements here, but I think you're smart to think long and hard about this. Your post reads like you don't really want to be an at-home mother, but somehow have gotten the notion you "ought" to. If nothing else, you should consider how the loss of work skills will affect your and your child(ren)'s future in the event you become the sole breadwinner. So many mothers are one husband and one job away from that well-known creek. I can't imagine how terrifying it must be to solely rely on someone other than yourself on a financial basis.
Around here most moms do go back to work when their kids start school, usually just part time somewhere nearby. It probably sounds a little snobbish, and maybe it is, but I can't see myself doing that. If I was to go back to work, I'd want to go all the way - back to full time work in a field I enjoy, not working at the grocery or the dollar store for the sake of flexible hours and a short commute.
Let me preface my comments by saying that I in no way mean to offend anyone who works a job that is not considered "professional" (i.e. teacher, lawyer, doctor etc). However, if you fall into the category of having what would be considered a professional career, you cannot leave it completely for 5-10 years and expect to pick back up where you left off. Nor can you expect to make the same salary as the people who did not take a leave of absence. In some cases, your skills would be so out of date that you would not even be qualified anymore for a position you once held. In my line of work if I left completely there is no way I could ever expect to work in the field once my kids are grown. If we are talking about people going to back to work as waitresses, retail etc. that's a different story.
It really depends on the position, though obviously everyone is going to face a tougher road in the current economy. I don't think anyone expects to step back in without losing a beat, much less where they would be had they not left the workforce, but educated professionals are seldom doomed to the ranks of waitstaff and cashiers because of an absence from the workforce. I've known professionals who have gone back without trouble and I've known women who decided getting back up to speed wasn't worth it and changed professions entirely. I know for myself, I'd have to update my certifications but my degree is still solid, and I'd be starting a step below the position I left but still earning a reasonable salary. I didn't like what I was doing, though, so when I had school aged kids I earned an associates in an entirely different field that I will finish out into a bachelors when the youngest goes off to school. I don't know if I'll ever use it in a full time capacity, but I would like to have it as a fall-back option and to enhance my freelance sales pitch.
People often think being a SAHM is easy but in reality it is HARD as heck