So I'm going to be a SAHM once I have my little boy and I'm realizing there's going to have to be some sacrifices made. One being my DH and having him home as much as I want him to be and some other material things that I won't mind giving up. So my question for other SAHM is what do you sacrifice to be home with you child/children and how do you cope/ deal with it?
Re: SAHM What do you sacrifice?
I've been a SAHM since DS was born. We planned for the situation since we got married, so financially, we just started out putting the money I was earning into savings. I guess we didn't have to cut much in that area when I stopped working.
I think one of the biggest sacrifices for me was adjusting to a more limited social life. I loved my job, both the work and colleagues. I still miss them sometimes. It took work to start building a new network of friends, whereas when I was working I had a built-in group that I saw daily. I've got a handful of other SAHM friends, now, and things have gotten better. Changing from analytical thinking every day to focusing on diapers/nursing/etc was also tough.
It was a rough transition for me, but after 2 1/2 years, I wouldn't change my situation. There's lots of time to work during other stages of my life, but my kids will only be little for so long. FWIW, I worked with other kids between 0-3 years, so I knew I'd have an extra hard time being at work with other kids while mine were at daycare.
I gave up my job which I loved and worked hard at. I was a teacher so I teach just in a different capacity now.
I end up sacrificing time/sleep/whatever so DH can be 100% for work. He needs that so he can be 100% at work.
Eleanor 9.30.13
Living on one income forces some sacrifices. We are a lot more frugal and cut out most of our entertainment expenses. It's important to still have some date nights and family outings, though.
I missed the social interaction I had at work. It took about a year for me to find a group of moms that I clicked with. I think it's important to have a social group that understands what you're going through and that can really relate to your situation.
The biggest difficulty for me was that my day was just a constant stream frustrations. I could start a bunch of housework or projects, but never accomplish anything. I missed that sense of accomplishment and completion that I had at work.
A huge sacrifice for any parent, but especially when you're with your child 24/7 is personal time. You will pee with an audience for years to come. lol
Overall I love staying at home with DS, but I often wonder if I should get a part time job to help out with expenses as well as for my own mental/emotional health. A lot of moms are naturals at tugs and love it 100%, but I will admit that I still struggle.
To save money, we try to make most meals at home, don't have cable (Netflix FTW!), swap child care with friends for date nights, use cloth diapers, breastfeed, and do free "fun" for family outings it play days (friends houses, library, local play at a boutique, park, picnics, etc). It's all a matter of what you get used to!
We are on a wait list for daycare, which is almost $800 a month. My employer health insurance for the family plan will cost about $11,000 a year, with a $2500 per person deductible/$6000 family. We will not qualify for Obamacare because the individual policy is under 9.5%. Although the family plan is over 20% of my gross income, not even considering the deductibles. My second child has a medical condition that costs us about $8000 out of pocket each year. (We reach our deductible and his prescriptions run about $300 a month because we have lousy coverage.).
Basically, what it comes down to, I cannot afford to work. I'm cashing out my 401K and returning to school full time. We will live off student loans and grants. My hubby and I will have to go without healthcare! and our children should qualify for Medicaid. I hate that, but I do not see any other options. We live in a very rural town, and a previous divorce prohibits me from moving more than a 50 mile radius. The good news, is that because hubby and I are both going into the healthcare field, we can practice in our rural town and have our loans reduced/paid off under a city contract. I'm trying to look at their bright side, and hoping like hell these government shut downs do not affect student grants and loans. If so, then we are pretty fucked. Edited for putting in paragraphs!
Whoa, there is a lot going on there. Would it be possible to even work part time with school? Also, if you guys are students, could you get healthcare through the school? usually it is pretty crappy, but better than nothing. @married2premed