Working Moms

Take pride-warning RANT

I am the white sheep in my family. I have a very, very large trashy contingent in my family. DH's is the same way. This is a loooong rant. I'm sorry but need to get this out.

So my mom was the only working mom in all her siblings. 3 sisters and 3 brothers married to women who stayed home. Her siblings all lived in varying degrees of poverty. So do their kids, which again consists entirely of one-income families, if they are lucky. Both my mom and me put up with phenomenally obnoxious comments about how "it must be nice to be rich." As though it was a fluke and not determination and hard work and sacrifice to help provide for our families. And my parents weren't rich.

Two things that have happened recently have set me off. One, a cousin with whom I was very close growing up, is a 43 year old single mother of a jr high age girl. Cousin has never had a full-time job. She has a college degree. She has lived with her parents pretty much her whole life (I think she had her own apartment for about 6 months.). Why? And I quote: because she is doing the most important job in the world raising her child and can't have a job outside the home. She and her daughter are both on welfare. Her mother raises her kid while she lays on her fat butt and watches television. Her kid is a total freaking mess. Cousin called me recently to say that since her father has died and her mother is in bad health, my husband and I should take in her and her daughter since my husband and I have a big enough house. Otherwise "what will happen to them?" Um, I don't care. Get a job. I have one, which explains the big house.

Second thing. DH has a niece in her early 20s who has a child with her boyfriend. She's on disability because she is deaf, but she is absolutely capable of working. She and her boyfriend are not financially making it, and on Facebook she is wailing and whining about the fact that she needs to go to work part time and leave her almost 2 year old with her mother a few hours a day. Her kid's language and behavioral development are phenomenally delayed, and her own mother says it's because she parks the kid in front of the tv to go smoke pot with her friends all day long. Again, they live in poverty. In a house in the Pacific Northwest that has minimal heat so they turn on the oven and open the door to keep the house warm. Super safe for a toddler almost 2 years old. My MIL just admonished me for mentioning we had to get a new car for DH on Facebook because it would hurt the pot-head's feelings. She's apparently already jealous bc I'm pregnant and she wants to have a second child and her BF refuses. The car is just "salt in the wound." Omfg. Then please unfriend me.

So, where is this going? To all of you who work "because you have to," please reframe how you look at it. You work because you care about caring for your children the best way you can. Certainly you could be a freeloader living with relatives or in utter poverty where your kids aren't safe. I'm proud of all of us who get out there every day, and face jobs that some days we hate, and leave our kids with others even on days we would rather snuggle them all day long, because we love our kids and want what is best for them. Some of us have other reasons, too, but even if you're just doing it to make ends meet, be proud of that.

Okay, that's out of my system. Sorry for the rant. It's been a hell of a week. I normally try not to judge, but every button I have has been pushed. And I'm having third trimester hormones to boot!

Re: Take pride-warning RANT

  • Amen sister!
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  • jlaOKjlaOK member
    Ha.  For a while there I thought you were talking about my extended family
    :P

    I tend to find that the de-friend button on Facebook and the silent button on my cell phone works wonders with those types of family members.
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  • As a fellow white sheep may I say THANK YOU and Amen!


  • Amen!  As much as I fantasize about being a SAHM, I would never do it if we could not adequately provide for our family on one income.  I feel very fortunate that I have education and a job that allows me to not only help provide, but gives a little extra cushion.  I know people who SAH and can barely afford basic essentials.  So irresponsible, IMO.  They are one unexpected expense from being totally screwed. Thank you for posting :)

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  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    Good point. I have a post master's degree and where we live, daycare is so expensive that we would barely break even if we had to pay for 2 kids. We are fortunate that DH is able to stay home with DD during the day and still work in the evenings. If we had to pay for daycare, one of us would have probably quit our job because it wouldn't make sense to pay for daycare when we might actually end up losing money to pay for it.
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  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.

    I think regarding the OP's family that since they are already relying on public assistance, they could easily qualify for daycare subsidies in order to work. If you need to work you find a way.
    Also in regards to "must be nice to make a ton of money," it all depends on how you look at it. I have a high income and can easily afford 2 in daycare. I would prefer to be a SAHM so for me it actually kinda sucks. My DH would be much more supportive of me SAH if I wasn't bringing in any money after daycare.
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  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    I live in a VLCOL rural area.   The median income for a family is below $35,000.  Compared to what I've seen on the bump, I pay peanuts for childcare, housing, etc.  Childcare costs would never exceed $6K per child.  I commute to a different town, where those same expenses are drastically different.  No, I don't "make a ton of $." If I told you all what my salary is, you'd probably laugh.  My H is a teacher and compared to what most people make who work in the same town, he does pretty good. Maybe that puts it into perspective.  So yes, my situation is different from others and I'm lucky that I do have a choice.
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  • Yeah, I see where the OP is coming from (and have some similar family dynamics myself) but it's not always an easy equation of working = better conditions.  Day care around here is ridiculously expensive.  I had kids later in life so my income was at a level where I could afford really good care, but if I had them in my 20s, even working a professional job with a Masters degree I would not have been able to afford the kind of care I have for them today.  I tell people at work all the time when they are judging young coworkers who quit to SAH that if it came down to a choice between iffy childcare and SAH, I would have chosen to SAH as well.  It's just not always that simple.

    This is not to say that there aren't irresponsible, freeloading parents as well.  Sure, there are.  It's just a complicated picture even with the best of intentions.
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  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    This is not always the case.  I know plenty of people that can't afford to have both parents work the same shift and pay for childcare, so one works a full-time 8-5 office job, and the other works part time evenings and weekends to make up the difference.  Once in a while they get into a pinch where one has to leave before the other can get home, but they can usually find someone to step in for an hour or 2.

    I know another family that sort of "wings it" with childcare.  The mom works so part-time, and has her schedule so far in advance, that she can usually find family members to pitch in and help out.  If not, her DH takes the day off or WFH.  This works better now that the kids are in school FT, but they made it work for a long time while the kids were younger.

    Some people truly can't figure out a way to work and have their children cared for.  But lots of people can, and feel that it's their God-given right to SAH.  
  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    My child care is $2k a month.

    We make more than enough to cover that expense.
    In addition, not working would mean missing out on employer contribution to 401k, not contributing to SS should I live long enough to collect.  Not working would mean no chance of ever returning to the level I'm currently at.


  • SoMoNY said:
    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    My child care is $2k a month.

    We make more than enough to cover that expense.
    In addition, not working would mean missing out on employer contribution to 401k, not contributing to SS should I live long enough to collect.  Not working would mean no chance of ever returning to the level I'm currently at.


    Similar here.  DH's salary is lower than mine (I'm a physician).  He is in academic science.  Even if we subtracted daycare expenses from only his salary (which, as PP pointed out, is fuzzy math), he still clears over $1000/month, plus the employer's contribution to his health insurance premium, 401(k) matching, and other benefits.
    DS born 8/8/09 and DD born 6/12/12.
  • Okay, just had to chime again on the cost of daycare vs take home pay. I thought I was getting a major steal for full time care at 13k a year (and still think I am) but I drive to the neighboring suburb to put my kid in an in-home with the most stringent standards. I just found out that the city I'm immediately in, with their higher child-adult ratios, charge a lot less - just over 8k a year for a licensed in-home. And this is just outside DC, one of the most expensive cities in the country. So if a close-in suburb of DC can get you licensed full time care at 8k, then I think it's pretty clear that some one deciding to stay home isn't just about it being too expensive to work since working minimum wage & paying for licensed care (which most min wage workers aren't btw but that's another discussion) would still net you $500/month and that's not nothing if you're living in poverty. 
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  • OP, I completely stand behind your rant. For a lot of my family, their life long goal is to be put on ssi disability, despite not being disabled.
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  • I see most of these posts look at their situation from month-to-month, and don't take in to account the long term.  Yes, you can SAH with your LO while they are infants/toddlers...but what happens when they are old enough to start school?  Taking years off work makes it difficult to reenter the workforce.  I've certainly see women do it...some even go back to school to earn graduate degrees.  But if you REALLY want to get ahead financially, finding a career, not just a job, where you pay your dues and work your way up is the way to earn a sizable income. 

    One of the reasons DH won't support me SAH is because of my income.  And I can't say I blame him!  It would be a significant hit to our future financial freedom and retirement lifestyle if my salary were to go away.  Even though on a month-to-month basis we would be fine.

    OP...I cant' believe they said that you should take them in.  That is crazy!

  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.

    I never, ever understand this crap. So even if daycare costs $20k/year, are you really telling me that as an adult you don't make $20k/year? That's $10/hour. And does your husband not pay for daycare? Why is it only the mother's salary that gets scrutinized when looking at daycare costs? Obviously I'm not talking about single moms who have no one to help with the cost - I'm referring only to the women who say they can't afford to work because of daycare taking up all of "their" pay with no mention of the husband's income. But to ditto a previous poster - we can afford 2 kids because we worked our butts off establishing good careers prior to having kids. We spaced them so that we wouldn't have two in daycare at the most expensive prices. But even still, we'll spend over $4k just for the 3 summer months having a toddler in daycare and a 1st grader in summer camp daycare. It's going to hurt, but big picture - it's not that bad.
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  • I see most of these posts look at their situation from month-to-month, and don't take in to account the long term.  Yes, you can SAH with your LO while they are infants/toddlers...but what happens when they are old enough to start school?  Taking years off work makes it difficult to reenter the workforce.  I've certainly see women do it...some even go back to school to earn graduate degrees.  But if you REALLY want to get ahead financially, finding a career, not just a job, where you pay your dues and work your way up is the way to earn a sizable income. 

    One of the reasons DH won't support me SAH is because of my income.  And I can't say I blame him!  It would be a significant hit to our future financial freedom and retirement lifestyle if my salary were to go away.  Even though on a month-to-month basis we would be fine.

    OP...I cant' believe they said that you should take them in.  That is crazy!

    This is exactly what I was thinking as I was reading through this discussion.

  • I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.

  • I'm chiming in...if you can't afford to pay for care or have a situation where you can stagger with your DH, you should bot have more children. Period.

    Even with the staggering, that leaves no time for family time and I feel that is very important too so for my opinion I don't think that's a good decision either.
    Staggering works well for my family. DD gets to spend all day with daddy and then he goes to work when I get home. I enjoy my evenings at home with her. Sometimes it's hard to be a single parent during the week, but we make it work. We have family time on the weekends.
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  • Maybride2 said:
    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.

    I never, ever understand this crap. So even if daycare costs $20k/year, are you really telling me that as an adult you don't make $20k/year? That's $10/hour. And does your husband not pay for daycare? Why is it only the mother's salary that gets scrutinized when looking at daycare costs? Obviously I'm not talking about single moms who have no one to help with the cost - I'm referring only to the women who say they can't afford to work because of daycare taking up all of "their" pay with no mention of the husband's income. But to ditto a previous poster - we can afford 2 kids because we worked our butts off establishing good careers prior to having kids. We spaced them so that we wouldn't have two in daycare at the most expensive prices. But even still, we'll spend over $4k just for the 3 summer months having a toddler in daycare and a 1st grader in summer camp daycare. It's going to hurt, but big picture - it's not that bad.
    Of course there's a difference between gross salary and net salary, and if your net salary is entirely consumed by childcare costs, and you're essentially living off one spouse's salary anyway, it's not at all unreasonable to decide whether stepping out of the workforce makes sense.

    Not every working mother is a privileged upper middle class professional with a career. Many are working low status, low paying jobs with minimal (and/or expensive) benefits, and they're not happy to be working and surrendering their entire paycheck to have their children in daycare and dealing with the stress of having both parents in the workforce.
  • jess9802 said:

    Maybride2 said:
    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.

    I never, ever understand this crap. So even if daycare costs $20k/year, are you really telling me that as an adult you don't make $20k/year? That's $10/hour. And does your husband not pay for daycare? Why is it only the mother's salary that gets scrutinized when looking at daycare costs? Obviously I'm not talking about single moms who have no one to help with the cost - I'm referring only to the women who say they can't afford to work because of daycare taking up all of "their" pay with no mention of the husband's income. But to ditto a previous poster - we can afford 2 kids because we worked our butts off establishing good careers prior to having kids. We spaced them so that we wouldn't have two in daycare at the most expensive prices. But even still, we'll spend over $4k just for the 3 summer months having a toddler in daycare and a 1st grader in summer camp daycare. It's going to hurt, but big picture - it's not that bad.
    Of course there's a difference between gross salary and net salary, and if your net salary is entirely consumed by childcare costs, and you're essentially living off one spouse's salary anyway, it's not at all unreasonable to decide whether stepping out of the workforce makes sense.

    Not every working mother is a privileged upper middle class professional with a career. Many are working low status, low paying jobs with minimal (and/or expensive) benefits, and they're not happy to be working and surrendering their entire paycheck to have their children in daycare and dealing with the stress of having both parents in the workforce.

    You're right. If there are women here that fit the description you gave that I offended, I'm sorry. It's just that when I typically hear women complain about daycare taking up all of their pay, it typically IS from upper middle class professionals who are simply desperate to justify their desire to SAH and don't want to just say that they want to. The women working lower wage jobs, in my experience, typically don't have a choice - they can't afford to not wok, and they either find inexpensive daycare or they get it subsidized.
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  • laurakaz13laurakaz13 member
    edited March 2014
    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    My childcare costs are around $8K per year, which is just a tiny fraction of my take home pay. When/if we have a second child, it will still be a fraction of my take home pay. However, this isn't even close to the reason I keep working. Not working has never been an option for me, b/c I love my career. SAHM= unfulfilling to me. And I'm just going to ditto what the other posters have said about this. This question is crap! The mother is not the only one whose salary should be scrutinized when it comes to childcare costs.
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  • Damnit, I can't gif. Could someone please post a slow clap gif on my behalf for the OP? She deserves it.
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  • Kimbus22 said:
    mae0111 said:
    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.
    This is not always the case.  I know plenty of people that can't afford to have both parents work the same shift and pay for childcare, so one works a full-time 8-5 office job, and the other works part time evenings and weekends to make up the difference.  Once in a while they get into a pinch where one has to leave before the other can get home, but they can usually find someone to step in for an hour or 2.

    I know another family that sort of "wings it" with childcare.  The mom works so part-time, and has her schedule so far in advance, that she can usually find family members to pitch in and help out.  If not, her DH takes the day off or WFH.  This works better now that the kids are in school FT, but they made it work for a long time while the kids were younger.

    Some people truly can't figure out a way to work and have their children cared for.  But lots of people can, and feel that it's their God-given right to SAH.  
    This.  I work overnights.  DH works weekends and 1 1/2 days during the week.  We could afford daycare but we don't need or want to.  We both prefer to work full time AND be home with our kid, soon to be kids.

    And like another poster said, we made a conscious decision to go to school, get established and get our money in order before we had a child.  That's why we were together for ten years before we had our son.

    Some people are a victim of circumstances.  Some people are suffering from their own crappy decisions. Some are a combination of both.  The important thing is to own whatever your situation is and do your best to make sure you're providing for your children.  Whether or not that means one parent works while the other stays home or both work isn't relevant as long as everyone's needs are being met.

    "It must be nice..." is a shitty phrase whether you're using it in the context of being able to stay home OR being able to afford daycare because it implies that shit just falls in your lap and you get to reap the benefits while someone else is suffering through no fault of their own.  Those cases are few and far between.  Most people in good situations are there because they MADE those situations a reality.

    Agreed. 100%
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  • MommyAtty said:



    I'm really curious how so many of you have jobs where you make so much money that you can actually afford daycare and come out ahead.  There will be zero point in me working when we have 2, because my entire take home pay will be used for daycare.  Must be nice to make a ton of $.
    Most of your family is probably not able to obtain jobs that pay enough to make the cost of daycare an option.  Remember that if mom goes to work, she has to pay someone to watch her kids. Since childcare costs at least $10k/year for one kid (often way more, depending where you live), with more than 1 kid it actually becomes tricky for it to be worth it for mom to work.




    To be perfectly frank, I got educated and didn't have kids until my career was established and I could afford them. Birth control isn't hard to figure out. I was married for 15 years without a single "oops." And I think you need to do the math. I often hear people say child care costs more than they make. Most of the time that's not true. Also, in my family, often grandmothers help take care of the kids (whether the moms are working or not). In both of the cases I talked about, the grandmas are already offering FREE child care, and one of them is actually raising the kid. These are just entitled women who think once they pop out a kid, it's the world's job to support them until they die. If you aren't one of those entitled women and you have a job, give yourself a hand. If you are staying at home and are financially able to do so because your significant other makes enough money to allow that to happen, count your blessings and give yourself a hand. If you're plunging your family further into poverty because you don't want to hold down a job, that's on you. (And why would you be on a board for working mothers??)
    Um, I am a working mother. And I post on this board at least a few times a week. I think it's strange that several of you think I came out of nowhere.

    Yes, we can afford our second child and the pregnancy was planned - but given the costs of daycare here, ($12k/year for a toddler, higher for an infant if you want a reasonable place), I am very much on the fence about going back to work after I have the baby. I do make enough that I would still take home a little bit each month after taxes, but not necessarily enough for me to choose work over staying at home with my kids. For career reasons, yes, I should keep a job.

    My point was simply that judging moms who stay at home and are broke is easy if you don't know the details of their situation. I'm assuming OP is talking about someone who would have a hard time finding a job that paid more than minimum wage. You don't know if they have family nearby that is willing/able to watch the kids while mom works. You don't know if she could find a job that had an odd enough schedule to allow her DH to always be home with the kids.

    Well then it sounds like you are able to choose - either keep working and contribute something small to your family's monthly income, even after paying for childcare, or SAH because you can afford to live without your salary. Not everybody has that choice and I don't think it's the same as not being able to afford to work.

    DS: 2/17/11          DD: 9/4/13
  • IMO, each parent/family should decide what is right for them to make sure the family's needs are met (as a PP mentioned).  However, if a single parent or both parents have to work to support the family financially, then that's what needs to be done.  My SIL's H is on the brink of unemployment, and yet she's done nothing to get out and try and get a job so at least one of them is employed and earning an income.  (DH has suggested to her that she could look into setting up an in-home daycare - that would enable her to be with her kids all day plus earn some money.)I mentioned to DH one day recently that she's going to live her SAHM dream in poverty if her H doesn't find a job soon.  (She's of the mind that SAHM is the "right" thing to do and she just "can't imagine other people raising her children.")  They also made some bad decisions, such as moving to a rural area with few employment options, and bought a house (instead of renting) when they knew that her H's employment was not secure (he was on probation for the first year so the company could determine if his agency would be successful).  SIL is coming over tonight, so I have to try really hard to keep my mouth shut.

    On my side of the family, my mom (who I love dearly) will sometimes make a comment about how nice and big our house is, and it's nicer than any home she's ever lived in.  So I kindly remind her that her choice to stay home until we were in school, and then work as a teacher's aide (parapro) once we were in school, impacted my parents' total income.  If she had gone back to work as a teacher (she has an M. Ed.), she could have had a house like ours too.  It's not like DH and I are executives - we're both individual contributors, but we both happen to work for companies that pay decent salaries.  (And not to mention that when she and my dad bought their first house in the late 70's and second house in the mid-80's, interest rates on mortgages were a lot higher than today.)  Our house is well within our means given our current jobs.

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  • I think this was mentioned earlier but I wanted to reiterate that the take-home pay after paying DC is just an immediate gratification.  If you are in a field that it is possible to get yearly raises or even promotions (with higher potential for raises), then you are missing out on that opportunity cost by choosing to stay at home.  If/when you choose to re-enter the workforce, it could very likely be at a lower rate than when you left, let alone the raises/promotions you could have missed out on along the way.

    If someone truly wants to be a SAHM, that's great!  But when someone says "I work just to put my kids in DC" or "I don't make enough after paying for DC to make it worthwhile", they aren't looking at the long-term picture.

    Yes, I am fortunate that my salary more than pays for DC.  And we would be fine living off my DH's salary.  (Note - I said "fine".  It would not be the lifestyle I am used to).  But my biggest reason for wanting to stay in the workforce is to keep up with the profession and have the opportunity to advance my career. 

    For those who haven't read it, I highly recommend the book "Lean In" by Sheryl Sandberg.  She talks about this and other aspects of having a career and being a mom.
  • Having your kids in a center where tuition is 2k/month is a choice and it's not the only choice - it may be your first choice or the only choice you would consider (some aren't open to licensed in-homes) - but it is indeed a choice, and to some extent a choice of luxury. Genuinely poor people aren't facing such choices - they're choices are more along the lines of being on a childcare subsidy that's only valid at certain locations or paying a neighbor $20/day to watch their kids or enrolling the kids at a lower-cost in-home daycare. 

    I think people forget that when they say they can't "afford" to work. Rarely is it accurate to say you can't afford to work. You just can't afford high-end daycare. It's not quite the same thing.
    I'm glad you mentioned this because there are other options out there than licensed day care centers. I am lucky enough to have my in laws watch my DS for half of the week and the other half he goes to a local babysitter who only charges me $15 a day and only changes me for days she actually watches him. I know I pay peanuts compared to some people and for the month it usually averages to $180. If i hadn't found this local babysitter I had another in home daycare lined up that was going to charge me $360 A month, again that's still peanuts compared to some. So for me it is definitely more than worth it to keep working. Also we don't make a lot of money either but me working keeps us at a comfortable spot right now that I wouldn't want to give up. I do lose some stuff by not taking DS to a regular center such as documentation of every little thing he did and she obviously doesn't have a learning curriculum like the centers do but that is something that I as parent have to teach at home. So it's not "nice" that I make a lot of money because we don't but that's the sacrifices we have to make.
  • Man, I didn't see anything wrong with the OP, but this thread has gone on to make me feel like shit for my "oops" baby and <$35k/year salary. Damn.

    Some of y'all need to reel it in a bit with the judgement. For real.




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  • Amen!

    It is nice to see that our years of school and hard work have taken us somewhere!

    I'll never say I'm sorry for being where I am or for having waited to start a family till we were in solid financial shape.

  • This is an inspiring post. Thank you. I get anxiety about having to leave LO in daycare (FTM here) but this helps me think about things differently. 
  • I really appreciated this post.  I've been feeling bad about working, having mixed feelings about wanting to work, thinking that I "should" be working part time or step down.  But, I am blessed to have advanced education and be in a role with a company that is really well paying and allows me to provide well for my family, contribute to 401k, have benefits and things for me like an onsite gym as well.  Why would I think to walk away from that?  Thank you for helping me get this perspective, I really needed it with the rut I've been in.
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