I've been on maternity leave since July, and I am headed back to work in a couple of weeks. The thing is I am dreading the rat race. I'm dreading the rush to get everyone ready and out the door in the mornings. I'm dreading the 45-minute commute. I'm dreading the rush to get home, get everyone fed, and get them to bed. Basically, I'm toying with the idea of becoming a SAHM.
I love my job and the people I work with, but I don't have a set "career path." I think I might feel a little less on the fence about work if I was an attorney, a publicist, a scientist, etc. Pile on to that the doubled daycare cost, and I'm not bringing home a whole lot of money for all that time spent on the road every day and being away from my kids.
DH and I have already had this discussion about 1,000 times, and he's sick of it. He supports whatever decision I want to make but has encouraged me to give it some time back at work before I throw in the towel.
Please, someone give me a pep talk and tell me that I will feel better once I'm back in the saddle.
Re: I think I need a pep talk. (UPDATE)
Change is stressful and you've just been through a huge one, and you're facing another big change going back to work. Try it for awhile before you make a big move to being a SAHM.
2010: Infertility
October 2015: missed miscarriage #2 at 11 weeks (trisomy 22)
I also agree with others to give yourself a set period of time and then re-evaluate. Give yourself at least 2 months back at work, then decide what course you want to take. Truly, though, the anticipation is so much worse than the actual, but it may be that being a WM isn't for you.
I agree with your DH. Your decision needs to be informed. You need to go back and see how it feels and reassess after a few months.
All of that aside, I do love my coworkers and the company. But part of the problem is my job responsibilities are changing, and I'm not quite sure what my new role is going to be. I'm nervous about that and the fact that I may end up in another department. I'm sure I'd adjust, but that doesn't negate the nervousness.
This has been a stressful year. We've experienced a lot of upheaval, and I had a scary pregnancy this last time around. I think my thought processes about work and how much of my life I want to put into it has changed. I'm willing to go back and give it a good go, but I'm wondering if my desire to put the effort into it has vanished. I have thought about taking a year off, but I probably can't go back to the job I love, and if I decide it was stupid to leave, that opportunity is gone. Therein lies the dilemma.