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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Would you like these work hours?

181 replies

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 11:28

Two days per week-1 pm-3 pm & 5.15-7.15 pm

One day per week-6 pm-7.30 pm

One day per week-11 am-1 pm-working from home

One child at Primary school

OP posts:
Vestus · 24/02/2026 13:44

I wouldn’t like the constant going to and fro, getting psyched and dressed for work for two hours at a time. I’d rather work two days a week.

BountifulPantry · 24/02/2026 13:46

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 12:18

For the money, are there any jobs for fun or as a hobby

I get all mornings off-take the dogs for a walk, go to pilates and I get two full days off a week, drop my child & pick up every day, but i’m sad I’m missing this section of the day with them

of course there are hobby jobs!

If you loved animals and did a couple of hours dog walking for example.

Or you worked a couple of hours a day but I’d was for a charity you were passionate about.

If you’re doing it for the money the hours are even more nuts. Would be better to work ten hours in one day then you’d be free for the rest of the week

FartyAnimal · 24/02/2026 13:48

If you earn enough money that's fine. Dad's home in the evening so why on earth do you give a toss what a bunch of internet clowns think? If it works for you, it's good.

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 13:48

SleepingStandingUp · 24/02/2026 13:06

Why would you be unreasonable op? You're happy, your kid is taken care of, your partner is happy.

I don't understand what yo u want from this?

To brag you work a few hours for a full time wage and everyone else is wage slave?
Has someone criticised you?
Are you looking to recruit other parents?

It’s all about being away from my children when little

OP posts:
EvangelineTheNightStar · 24/02/2026 13:50

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 13:48

It’s all about being away from my children when little

and what is the role? Unless have missed you sharing already?!

whatthedickens5 · 24/02/2026 13:51

Well it all depends on the hourly pay :-) Also your husband will be home to look after the child so I can't see why not. If you need the money then go for it.

ReyRey12 · 24/02/2026 13:52

If i got my full time salary for those hours, bring it on.

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 13:52

It’s teaching music groups, not OF

OP posts:
IDrinkTeaAllTheTime · 24/02/2026 13:54

I don’t really understand the point of this post. You asked if people would like these hours, most people have said no for very valid reasons, but you keep coming back and saying why these hours suit you better.

If you’re happy with the hours then what’s the issue?

Talipesmum · 24/02/2026 13:57

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 13:52

It’s teaching music groups, not OF

Makes sense. In that case I think you’ve done well to constrain it to just those out-of-school hours!
Is your OH ok with it - is he making you feel guilty? Anyone else?

Sa11yCinnamon · 24/02/2026 13:58

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 13:52

It’s teaching music groups, not OF

That sounds like a lovely job.

It seems like your only issue is feeling guilty about the time away from your children and no one else can answer that for you. It's just up to you whether it's worth it.

Babsandherwabs · 24/02/2026 14:00

Ontheroadtonowheregood · 24/02/2026 12:06

This is my worry

If that’s your worry then that’s a bit different. People are getting caught up in the bitty shifts.
I work 3 evenings a week and Saturday with primary/nursery kids (I also work the days on those weekday evenings, I’m not sat at home while my kids are at school although that sounds dreamy). Yeah it’s not ideal but the payoff is that I LOVE my job and the money while not great bumps our income up enough to make a big difference. And DH sees the kids more/more intensely than he did before so that’s good.

IDrinkTeaAllTheTime · 24/02/2026 14:00

Also, I find it majorly irritating when people post really vague questions with no context and then come back and answer in abrubt, short sentences.

Why not just give the context from the start, OP? It would probably help people understand the situation a bit more and answer based on that.

Based on your update, I do think YABU. You work, what, 9.5 hours or so a week and are unhappy that it takes time away from your children? So, stop working then, or don’t. What do you actually want?

Hankunamatata · 24/02/2026 14:03

Well if you need the money, you work the hours. Ideally every person should have money of their own. Would have helped if you didn't was tutoring or teaching.

Doesnt matter if its likeable or not.

CantBreathe90 · 24/02/2026 14:10

I think that's fine. You will be out and therefore unavailable to see your DC three evenings a week. That still leaves the majority of evenings, plus the weekend (or possibly minus two hours of the weekend). Presumably too, you would be able to get most of your life admin / housework / personal hobbies out the way whilst your DC was at school? So then you could have plenty of quality time with them when you were together!

You won't get many sensible answers on MN though. So many bitter people, saying to work every hour God sends and be a martyr For Reasons. Either brainwashed or jealous (or both). Enjoy the set up you have, it sounds perfect to me.

Slawbans · 24/02/2026 14:12

I think you’d better off just doing 10-4 one day using after school club, then 10-3 . 11 hours in total. This means when you are at work you are fully there and when you are home you are fully present not worrying about work. Context switching is a real killer for productivity.

With Your pattern no one will understand your hours and will expect things of you when you are not there.

You have to think of school holidays . With your pattern you’ll be paying for 5 days of holiday club and missing fun days out etc.

sleepylittlebunnies · 24/02/2026 14:23

I’d sooner work 1 x 12 hour night shift a week, that’s lots of very short shifts.

moderndilemma · 24/02/2026 14:27

IDrinkTeaAllTheTime · 24/02/2026 14:00

Also, I find it majorly irritating when people post really vague questions with no context and then come back and answer in abrubt, short sentences.

Why not just give the context from the start, OP? It would probably help people understand the situation a bit more and answer based on that.

Based on your update, I do think YABU. You work, what, 9.5 hours or so a week and are unhappy that it takes time away from your children? So, stop working then, or don’t. What do you actually want?

God me too!

It would have been so much easier if OP had said something like:

"I have a skill and vocation (music). Working in this for about 12 hours a week would bring earn about the same as a 9-5 minimum wage job. Hours are split across 4 days such that I could do all school drop offs and pick ups, and have time for other activities - hobbies, dog walking, housework in the mornings while dc were at school. The downside is that 3 of the days involve a couple of hours of evening work and I would miss teatime, homework and bedtime on those days. Dh is home early enough to do all of those, but I don't want to miss important time with dc while they are young." (adjusted to suit).

In which case my answer would be - sounds perfect for a work life balance. Your dc get to spend dedicated time with their dfather, you are persuing a vocation where you might be able to increase hours as dc get older.

LittleMyLabyrinth · 24/02/2026 14:36

Sounds good to me. Still able to do pickup/drop-off and spend time with kids. Probably more time since you'd not be squeezing housework into evenings and weekends.

Anonomoso · 24/02/2026 14:38

My DC are grown up now but I had PT jobs when they were young, one that was after school for a few hours daily and it was fine.

Your DC will be with their dad and if it's good money and something you enjoy doing then that's a bonus, it's only just over 5.5 hours where you'll be away from your DC during the whole week.

You'll also have school holidays off, which seem to come round so quickly now, where you can spend time with your DC doing nice things now the days are stretching out a bit.

TakeTheCuntingQuichePatricia · 24/02/2026 14:42

Sounds perfect to me @Ontheroadtonowheregood .
Dc are with a parent every evening. Dad can cook/homework etc when you're at work.

ImFineItsAllFine · 24/02/2026 14:45

If I could get by on working 9.5 hours a week (alongside DHs income) I'd want those hours to all fall inside school hours I think. It's too much faff around early evening/dinner time for not enough total hours (unless the hourly rate is astronomical).

EDIT: have read OPs updates re earning similar to a ft wage. I'm still not convinced I'd want to be working over dinner time tbh.

MassiveOvaryaction · 24/02/2026 14:46

When my DC were small I worked as a carer. I did school pick up every day but a couple of nights I'd have to go back out from 6 til 10. I also worked a whole day (7am-10pm) every other weekend. It wasn't the best (had been working daily 9:30-2:30 prior until made redundant, needed to do more hours caring to bring in the same amount).

Can you still do school pick up if you finish at 3? Also primary covers a big range of needs - mine were going to bed at 8 by year 5 iirc so you'd still be back in time for bedtime.

BloominNora · 24/02/2026 14:46

moderndilemma · 24/02/2026 14:27

God me too!

It would have been so much easier if OP had said something like:

"I have a skill and vocation (music). Working in this for about 12 hours a week would bring earn about the same as a 9-5 minimum wage job. Hours are split across 4 days such that I could do all school drop offs and pick ups, and have time for other activities - hobbies, dog walking, housework in the mornings while dc were at school. The downside is that 3 of the days involve a couple of hours of evening work and I would miss teatime, homework and bedtime on those days. Dh is home early enough to do all of those, but I don't want to miss important time with dc while they are young." (adjusted to suit).

In which case my answer would be - sounds perfect for a work life balance. Your dc get to spend dedicated time with their dfather, you are persuing a vocation where you might be able to increase hours as dc get older.

This - although a lot of people were being deliberately obtuse - this would have been a lot clearer.

In your circumstances OP, this sounds perfect. Your kids get to see mom work, you still get loads of free time without losing out on salary and you are still there in the holidays, mornings, weekends and two evenings a week.

The other three you get to (hopefully) come home to fed and bathed children who are ready for their bed time story!

MassiveOvaryaction · 24/02/2026 14:46

TakeTheCuntingQuichePatricia · 24/02/2026 14:42

Sounds perfect to me @Ontheroadtonowheregood .
Dc are with a parent every evening. Dad can cook/homework etc when you're at work.

Yeah. As long as he's one of the good ones that actually does that stuff.

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