Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To NOT feel guilty that my kids are in childcare?

807 replies

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 17:47

Inspired by the childcare eating a £45k salary and the anti nursery sentiment from a few posters on there as being inferior for a child.

anyone else not feel in the slightest guilty that there kids are in nursery and have been post maternity leave?

yeah when they cried at drop off was rough and I called into the check out they were but that soon settled. They do lovely events for the parents and upload lots of amazing activities they do, they’ve made fantastic friends.

I could’ve reduced my hours but I didn’t, we could’ve maybe managed on one salary (glad we didn’t when rates shot up) but I went back FT when dc 1 was 15 months (used annual leave for part time before then) and dc2 was 13 months.

anyone else just not feel guilty? I like the lifestyle we can get when we’re working, especially since the 15 funded hrs and now 30, it’s so affordable. (Eldest is in school and youngest now has the 30 hrs) bill is less than £400 a month inc club etc. I like having something else to focus on too.

im not alone or am I?

OP posts:
NuffSaidSam · 10/04/2025 20:28

AquaPeer · 10/04/2025 20:20

Well obviously if you make false claims I’m not spending my time googling to prove them false. That’s not how debate works. In the absence of other evidence, we’ll just all assume you’re wrong

Ok. It's no skin off my nose either way.

SouthLondonMum22 · 10/04/2025 20:29

Thepeopleversuswork · 10/04/2025 20:10

@crumblingschools

It is a pity though that careers can be wrecked if you go part-time. Interestingly DH is actively demonstrating/promoting in his firm that senior level roles can be part-time and no impact of maternity/shared leave. So people who have had career breaks/work part-time are applying/working towards those roles, which they previously thought were (and they were under previous management) out of reach.

Fair. I think its true that at very senior levels there is more flexibility in certain careers and some progressive companies are actively promoting this. Unfortunately, though, the time when you need to really lean into your career tends to coincide with the time you are having children and the time they are very young and need hands-on care. Going part time in your 50s when you've built a reputation is great but its too late to give you the ability to play a more hands-on role at home more of the week. And taking several years off work when you're in your late 20s/30s is often career-destroying or significantly career-limiting for women.

I hope this is changing but if you are career-oriented then opting out of the workforce at this point in your life is a risky move for many women. And of course for a lot of women it's simply not possible.

I'm at a senior level and I can be very flexible in the sense that I can manage my own diary, WFH and as long as what needs to be done is done and I have no meetings that afternoon, I can pick up early from nursery if it is my day to pick up.

But if I went part time, I would lose that flexibility and I wouldn't progress any further. Unfortunately, that's just how it is right now.

NuffSaidSam · 10/04/2025 20:30

SouthLondonMum22 · 10/04/2025 20:25

The very mixed research that usually says the quality of nursery is key. Some research is also American and their daycares are quite different to nurseries.

I think the quality of the childcare being key is a no brainer. I think we can all agree on that! Even without peer reviewed studies.

MossLover · 10/04/2025 20:33

I think it’s hard to say when you haven’t experienced both staying home with your DC and being a working mum.

I know when I was little, I loved my child care center. There were fun activities, different toys than I had at home, arts and crafts to do, and I had good friends I liked to play with.

Some SAHP are superstars and manage to give their kids all of that at home, which I applaud. Personally, with the other responsibilities I have on my plate and my social ineptitude, I struggle with it. But I would also really be sad if most of the time when DD was little was spent away from me… So I send her to school two days a week, in addition to two hours a day at my gym or church’s child care center. She seems to enjoy it a lot, and she’s always making new friends (crazy little extravert!)

At home, we do some reading, writing, and maths, artwork (when I have time to set and clean it all up for her), chores (or “home economics”), gardening, and occasionally we’ll get to the playground, museum, family fun center, library, etc… but a lot of chores

DemonsandMosquitoes · 10/04/2025 20:43

Mine went to nursery from four and five months. And I didn’t even have to return to work! They’re now 22 and 19, unscathed, and all bonded just fine. Never a seconds guilt.

melua · 10/04/2025 20:43

Although it's preferable for some mums (who, by their own admission, can't cope with being with their babies full time); or a necessity for those who need to work and have have no choice, its obvious that it's far from ideal to have small babies and toddlers doing long days in nursery before the age of 2.5 (when they start to meaningfully socialise). Even then, toddlers don't need to be there for 9 or 10 hour days - just a few hours a few days per week is more than enough.

The govt obviously won't focus on what's best for babies because they just want mums and dads all working full/ time and paying tax.

Having said this, babies will survive. At least they're physically safe and it's obviously a life-saver for children who might otherwise be at home, but being neglected or abused. Those in constant childcare know no different, so it is what it is for them.

It does seem like we're facing some kind of escalating teenage mental health crisis in recent years though. Who knows why - perhaps a combination of social media / screen time, combined with the trend for children to spend the most part of their very early years in institutional settings? Families increasingly rushed, under pressure and no time for each other?

Years ago, some families used to think nothing of sending children to boarding school aged 7. Now we know about 'boarding school syndrome' and the long-term impacts. Or when wealthy Victorian families would leave their children with the nanny all day - the children would just be 'presented' to the parents for a couple of hours in the evening. Easy for the parents. Not so great for the children. But again, they had no frame of reference, no other experience to compare to.

It's a controversial subject and obviously, a lot of families have no choice. But I think the impact on babies needs properly researching. I'm not talking about toddlers in for a few days a week. I mean 12 well old babies, doing ten hour days, 5 days per week. Surely this is too much.

BethDuttonBaby · 10/04/2025 20:47

NuffSaidSam · 10/04/2025 20:19

And anyone who needs to search for anything 😂

It's Mumsnet, not my thesis. I don't have to do the source work for you.

if you assert something as fact you back it up with links.

otherwise it’s just obvious you are talking out of your arse.

AquaPeer · 10/04/2025 20:47

melua · 10/04/2025 20:43

Although it's preferable for some mums (who, by their own admission, can't cope with being with their babies full time); or a necessity for those who need to work and have have no choice, its obvious that it's far from ideal to have small babies and toddlers doing long days in nursery before the age of 2.5 (when they start to meaningfully socialise). Even then, toddlers don't need to be there for 9 or 10 hour days - just a few hours a few days per week is more than enough.

The govt obviously won't focus on what's best for babies because they just want mums and dads all working full/ time and paying tax.

Having said this, babies will survive. At least they're physically safe and it's obviously a life-saver for children who might otherwise be at home, but being neglected or abused. Those in constant childcare know no different, so it is what it is for them.

It does seem like we're facing some kind of escalating teenage mental health crisis in recent years though. Who knows why - perhaps a combination of social media / screen time, combined with the trend for children to spend the most part of their very early years in institutional settings? Families increasingly rushed, under pressure and no time for each other?

Years ago, some families used to think nothing of sending children to boarding school aged 7. Now we know about 'boarding school syndrome' and the long-term impacts. Or when wealthy Victorian families would leave their children with the nanny all day - the children would just be 'presented' to the parents for a couple of hours in the evening. Easy for the parents. Not so great for the children. But again, they had no frame of reference, no other experience to compare to.

It's a controversial subject and obviously, a lot of families have no choice. But I think the impact on babies needs properly researching. I'm not talking about toddlers in for a few days a week. I mean 12 well old babies, doing ten hour days, 5 days per week. Surely this is too much.

This has been researched, in fact my sisters children were in a research nursery for a bit. It was in a university and the health and social care and students did research projects on all sorts of impacts and best practise in childcare. My sister works for the university and this isn’t uncommon, although many universities have closed their on site nurseries now so maybe less so

Genuinelyenquiring · 10/04/2025 20:48

Radra · 10/04/2025 20:27

It's not work, though?

The after school care that my kids receive is basically the choice between:

Playing outside
Arts and crafts
Lego
Organised games/sports
From 5:30, TV is an option

It's not really very different to what they would do at home

Except that at home they're with you so they can act out/do nothing/not follow rules etc. It's like an adult enjoys coming home for the same reason - it's your own space and you're with your own people.

This sounds goady but it's not meant to be. I just don't think an after school club is equivalent to being at home with a parent/caregiver. Of course it's not an option for everyone and lots of people have to work full time and have no flexibility but I still don't think it's the same.

And I really don't think stamina to last 10 hours in a childcare setting is necessary in a 4 year old.

Gruttenberg · 10/04/2025 20:52

I'm in my 60's and my kids were full time in nursery when no one actually did that. I hated being a stay at home mum - I take my hat off to anyone who loves it. My kids are now in their 40s and can't remember that when I used to collect them they both tried to run back in because they loved it so much. I was a much better Mum after having a refreshing day at work than I would have been if I'd been home full time.

NuffSaidSam · 10/04/2025 20:56

BethDuttonBaby · 10/04/2025 20:47

if you assert something as fact you back it up with links.

otherwise it’s just obvious you are talking out of your arse.

No, this is Mumsnet, an internet chat forum. None of us are required to provide sources for anything we say. It's chat. If you are interested the research is out there to be read, if not just sail past.

If it were me and I was making a decision about childcare I would research as much as I could, but I'm that sort of person. If you're not that's fine too. It's certainly easier to just assume that anyone who says something you disagree with is 'talking out of their ass'....saves loads of reading. Ignorance is bliss!

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 10/04/2025 20:56

But I think the impact on babies needs properly researching. I'm not talking about toddlers in for a few days a week. I mean 12 well old babies, doing ten hour days, 5 days per week. Surely this is too much.

It had been researched.

The quality of childcare is key.
For under 2's there is no benefit to them being in high quality childcare but it's not detrimental either.
For 2+ there are benefits to be seen in terms of language development, social skills and developing gross and fine motor skills.

Thegirlsdidtheirownthing · 10/04/2025 21:03

I have two kids, both have done 5 day a week full time nursery from approx 12 months. I feel no guilt about this, one is still in it and loves it. The other goes there for afterschool and holidays. He does a variety of activities Lego, arts & crafts, baking, reading, outside play etc. I actually think it's good for him because he gets to play/fight/negotiate with other kids which he wouldn't get to do at home because kids don't play out on the street anymore like I did when I was young.

Radra · 10/04/2025 21:05

Genuinelyenquiring · 10/04/2025 20:48

Except that at home they're with you so they can act out/do nothing/not follow rules etc. It's like an adult enjoys coming home for the same reason - it's your own space and you're with your own people.

This sounds goady but it's not meant to be. I just don't think an after school club is equivalent to being at home with a parent/caregiver. Of course it's not an option for everyone and lots of people have to work full time and have no flexibility but I still don't think it's the same.

And I really don't think stamina to last 10 hours in a childcare setting is necessary in a 4 year old.

It's not exactly the same as being at home but it's not work though and it doesn't take "stamina" to endure it as if it were.

My kids are old enough to tell me how they feel about it and what they tell me is that they enjoy it. Sometimes after a school event or whatever they have they option to come straight home from school and 90% of the time they ask to stay at after school club! I had the opportunity to drop another day at work and when I talked to my kids about it, they literally asked whether that would mean they had to "miss out on after school club" 😂

Thepeopleversuswork · 10/04/2025 21:09

@NuffSaidSam

No, this is Mumsnet, an internet chat forum. None of us are required to provide sources for anything we say. It's chat. If you are interested the research is out there to be read, if not just sail past.

It's true that none of us are required to provide sources. But if you're putting a controversial opinion out there on a highly emotive topic which you know will upset or frighten lots of readers about something they have limited or no control over, it would be responsible to present facts as opposed to vaguely frightening hypotheses.

Most of the rhetoric about childcare being bad is based on "stands to reason doesn't it?" or "it can't be natural" type arguments, from people who just don't like the sound of it but haven't really thought their arguments through or researched it, or the reader upthread with the choice Daily Mail article.

To the extent that there is any evidence of damage to children from childcare, its specifically limited to nurseries which are not good. There is no credible evidence that childcare in and of itself is damaging, despite people spending many decades trying to unearth it.

It's fine to have an opinion, this board is all about opinions and it's fine to pose questions about it. But when it's something so obviously inflammatory and frightening and you haven't done the homework to back your argument up you shouldn't be surprised when people rubbish that opinion.

Motheranddaughter · 10/04/2025 21:11

maudlinbrassmonkey · 10/04/2025 19:27

I’ll just leave this here…

Children are only young for a few years and I’ll never regret the time I am spending with them while they’re small.

Said no man ever

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 21:16

MsCactus · 10/04/2025 20:27

I'm not the poster who mentioned the research, but this medium post does a good job of summarising current childcare research - and also links to the original studies, so you can verify their conclusions if you want to https://criticalscience.medium.com/on-the-science-of-daycare-4d1ab4c2efb4

Every bit of research I've read though says 1-1 care (doesn't have to be a parent - could be a relative or a nanny etc) is best for children under age 3, then nursery is better after age 3, but the ideal is half days.

Btw I work full time and have used full time 8am-6pm childcare after mat leave, so I don't follow this rule - but that's what the research I've read always seems to say is best.

But a child with a sibling would never get 1-1 care, could be 3-1 if they have 2 other siblings or were multiples? Then it’s the same ratio as at nursery

OP posts:
SouthLondonMum22 · 10/04/2025 21:17

Thepeopleversuswork · 10/04/2025 21:09

@NuffSaidSam

No, this is Mumsnet, an internet chat forum. None of us are required to provide sources for anything we say. It's chat. If you are interested the research is out there to be read, if not just sail past.

It's true that none of us are required to provide sources. But if you're putting a controversial opinion out there on a highly emotive topic which you know will upset or frighten lots of readers about something they have limited or no control over, it would be responsible to present facts as opposed to vaguely frightening hypotheses.

Most of the rhetoric about childcare being bad is based on "stands to reason doesn't it?" or "it can't be natural" type arguments, from people who just don't like the sound of it but haven't really thought their arguments through or researched it, or the reader upthread with the choice Daily Mail article.

To the extent that there is any evidence of damage to children from childcare, its specifically limited to nurseries which are not good. There is no credible evidence that childcare in and of itself is damaging, despite people spending many decades trying to unearth it.

It's fine to have an opinion, this board is all about opinions and it's fine to pose questions about it. But when it's something so obviously inflammatory and frightening and you haven't done the homework to back your argument up you shouldn't be surprised when people rubbish that opinion.

It's also always about ''tiny babies'' in nurseries for 10 hour days every single day for extra dramatic effect.

SouthLondonMum22 · 10/04/2025 21:17

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 21:16

But a child with a sibling would never get 1-1 care, could be 3-1 if they have 2 other siblings or were multiples? Then it’s the same ratio as at nursery

Yep. I have twins, they've never had 1-1 care.

TicTac80 · 10/04/2025 21:19

YANBU OP.

Both my DC were at nursery (full time) from 6 months old. I had to work FT (breadwinner). I chose a wonderful nursery: lovely facilities, highly regarded place and wonderful staff (many of whom had worked there for many years). My DC both loved it there, and carried on going to the holiday clubs held there until they started secondary school. When we bump into the staff in town, they remember the DC (now 18 and 11!).

I'd be lying if I said I didn't feel guilty at times - I would have loved to have been able to stay home for longer, or go PT whilst the DC were tiny. On the other hand, it helped knowing the DC were well taken care of, thriving and loved their time at the nursery. It's also where the DC picked up English (we didn't speak it at home, but the nursery were fab with this and I provided vocab lists so they'd understand when DC switched languages!). If I had quit work and become an SAHP, my career (and so my ability to earn, plus pension contributions etc) would have gone down the pan.

FWIW, I still feel bad when I can't make events because of not being able to get the time off from work, but I think that's the same for every parent, isn't it? I do take my hat off to SAHP's though, I don't know how well I'd do it!

Tbrh · 10/04/2025 21:21

Stripeyanddotty · 10/04/2025 18:09

So far 2 posters have said their kids do 3 days and another poster’s child goes term time only. Both of which are very different to 8am to 6pm 5 days a week.

This. Kids doing long hours is not a good thing, especially very young ones. I don't really understand why you'd have kids if you basically only see them in the weekend.

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 21:21

NuffSaidSam · 10/04/2025 20:26

I'm sorry I did my degree a while ago now and can't quote references off hand (and I've not got the time or inclination to dust off the textbooks). You can use google to find peer-reviewed articles though (in addition to all the rubbish I agree is out there). It used to be called Google Scholar, but again I haven't had cause to use it for a while!

Doctorate or undergraduate?

not sure I’d place too much stock in the research skills of an undergrad dissertation

OP posts:
MidnightPatrol · 10/04/2025 21:24

Tbrh · 10/04/2025 21:21

This. Kids doing long hours is not a good thing, especially very young ones. I don't really understand why you'd have kids if you basically only see them in the weekend.

Dads have been doing that for centuries without question?

In any case, you don’t only see them at the weekend - it’s a bit like saying if you send your child to school you only see them at the weekend.

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 21:24

Tbrh · 10/04/2025 21:21

This. Kids doing long hours is not a good thing, especially very young ones. I don't really understand why you'd have kids if you basically only see them in the weekend.

To live a comfortable life? Re the ‘long day’ The child would be awake regardless. Does it matter where exactly they are?

OP posts:
AquaPeer · 10/04/2025 21:25

Kanfuzed123 · 10/04/2025 21:21

Doctorate or undergraduate?

not sure I’d place too much stock in the research skills of an undergrad dissertation

Im pretty certain we’re not benefitting from the expertise of someone with a doctorate in child development

Swipe left for the next trending thread