Thanks for everyone's kind words.
jothe, no centralised funds, but now mat leave returners are meant to get priority in internal funding competitions, PhD studentships, etc. But that's only been the case since this autumn, on the heels of our Athena SWAN application last year - it wasn't in place when I came back. I've been back for nearly 4 years; I returned when DD was 16wo, as I could only afford the full pay period (and had a PhD student graduating: I'd have to read his thesis whether I was paid or not - I didn't want to massively resent him for the fact that I would have to work while draining all our savings). They're also meant to get a break from teaching and admin. I didn't get that - in fact my teaching and admin increased by vast amounts (various factors combined, nothing on purpose). Everything hit me like a load of bricks on my return and I was suffering from massive imposter syndrome (still am, but have a bit more perspective) and was terrified about saying anything, since I was BF DD who could not be bottlefed, so at 16wo still needed me very often, and I was working from mostly home. I was terrified of being seen as not coping.
But it's been so long now, I don't count as a mat leave returner. I am keeping it in my back pocket for argument if there is ever an internal competition I put in for again. But they can't retroactively give me things I got pushed out of over the last 4 years. I've managed to step down from some of the admin and last year, finally, they hired someone to take over a large chunk of the extra admin that fell on me when I returned.
Thanks, tulip. Sure, a mental break would help! But not enough. It won't punch up my track record or restart my career, and I have no hope for one until Aug anyway when I should be able to take a week off. I've got undergrads in the lab over the summer, and they need constant attention, so I'll need to be checking in via email even when on family trips.
city, I am very lucky in that my HoD is very supportive, particularly of my health issues. His son was confined to bed for over a year with CFS/ME and was tested for the condition they believe I have (son didn't have it, but it meant HoD actually knew about it and its symptoms). He's arranged with me to informally work flexitime, full time over 4.5 days (after a meeting with OH went horribly wrong; they suggested the result of an assessment could be finding I wasn't capable of my job, and the level of scrutiny into my life outside of work they said they would need to do was terrifying, and they also said things which suggested they - I'm saying 'they', but it's 'she', there's just one woman who is the sum total of support for staff - buyed into many misconceptions and prejudices about fatigue-related illnesses).
A good half of the dozen-plus grants I didn't get were collaborations :) I'm pursuing that tirelessly - currently one in consideration where I'd get 1/3 of a postdoc - it has made it to the 'interview' stage, so potentially hopeful? (but it's only 1/3 a postdoc!). Will be on one for next year with 1/2 a PhD student. The one I'm trying to get up my motivation for writing will be with three people - one split Postdoc between two of us and a PhD for the third, and I'm lead. Had a meeting for another one a few months ago, and she said she'd send me stuff, and never did... have to get back to her. But again, it's just so hard to carve out time, energy for writing these when the funding situation seems so hopeless.
DH has CSF/ME and is SAHD while starting up a business. We'll know in a few months now how it's going, although all estimates were 2-3 years for breaking even, so as far as income goes he won't contribute for a while. He does main childcare, and we pay for 3 afternoons at nursery (within paid-for hours, but its a private nursery to accommodate me coming to pick her up after work, so we have to pay extra to make up their fees) to give him some daytime to work. He can't do much more around the house than caring for DD, and he also does 'admin', although not very well - he did finally hire a cleaner after over a year without, which should make my life much better (they start next week).
newideas - thanks. Working on my health, but it is so slow. I was doing pretty well between last summer and autumn, but then was knocked off by a series of colds over the winter (and by 'series', I mean about 40 or so) and I'm only slowly crawling back up to normalcy. Thus the celebrating cooking and sitting once a week. And I know that I'm actually doing well in comparison to others with similar health issues - on the CFS thread people are dealing with leaving their jobs entirely, and I'm just moaning about not reaching a pinacle someday! But it still hurts, as I really did want to be a Prof.
If my computer dies, I will perhaps have to play the mat leave card. At the moment I'm saving that for an emergency, as I can still manage, barely. My Dept isn't mainly computational, so they don't understand - a 'good' comptuer would be £500 for them, and my bare minimum requirements are more like £2K (a really useful machine would be £4-5K, but that will definitely wait for a grant, and would be for personal use of a postdoc, not me).
I do have good support and have been following advice - I'm just not getting funding, and thus not doing research, and thus falling deeper and deeper into the hole. Also came out of last year's appraisal feeling like I did before my last promotion - being actively discouraged, where they suggested I could apply for promotion to Reader a few years after I get a new grant - whereas I'm thinking as soon as funding comes in, go for it. My track record will only get worse the longer I wait. But that's clearly the pattern here, given I was discouraged last time but "sailed through" when it got down to it. My track record right now is actually pretty strong minus the last two years (as papers kept coming out with some delay after last student and postdoc left) - as they only look at the past 5 years, the more of those earlier years I can keep the better.
You can turn to mainly teaching, and they'll keep you on and say nice things about you, but those people retire as SL (on the same salary I am now). I know several, and they're very nice (and less stressed). But I'm not sure I've quite reached the point yet where I'm willing to say this is as far as my career will get, and do this for the next 30 years. I think I need something to look forward to and strive for. I enjoy research, and I'd like to keep doing it. And it's clear a 'break' from research is a disaster; even my unintential break is already having a repurcussions. Turning to mainly teaching is a one-way street.
Although, I don't know - perhaps making an active choice before being squeesed out is better? But not ready to do it yet.