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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to wonder what work are expecting me to do?

532 replies

FriskyHeeler · 10/04/2026 11:59

I've worked at my current employer for 3 years and recently had a change in circumstances (in February) which means I have no childcare for my 3 children after school for 1-2 days out of the week. They have been understanding and accomodated my needs so far but have asked me to look at what realistic options are available and have called a meeting for next week to discuss, as the situation is not sustainable long term. I'll outline the facts below, please read carefully because it's not as simple a solution as most people seem to think.

  • I work 8.30 - 5pm Monday to Friday and it takes me 30 mins to get to and from work.
  • My husband works 8 - 4.30 Monday to Friday, his office is an hour away and he works from home on Thursdays and Fridays. Soon to be 3 days a week. He used to work nights, so would drop off and pick up the kids each day, however the strain on family life, our relationship, his mental health was not sustainable and he had numerous breakdowns over a long period of time and he changed jobs. Not ideal but I won't make my husband do a job he hated when it made him want to kill himself every day. He can be quite volatile and in the past this has affected work when he last left for periods of time so I've been left to sort the kids 100% of the time, at times. Work know things are rocky and my line manager thinks I should leave him but this would only make the situation more difficult.
  • Our kids are 3, 5 & 9. The 3 & 5 year olds attend the same school/nursery and the 9 year old attends a different school.
  • 2 out of the 3 kids have special needs and are settled in their schools. They previously attended the same primary school but had serious issues so we had to move them.
  • Both schools have breakfast club, 1 starts at 7.50 and the other at 8.10, this obviously means I am often 10 mins late to work on the days they are in club.
  • Neither school has ANY after school provision.
  • We unfortunately live in an area where wrap around care isn't in demand, so options are pretty non existent.
  • There are no childminders in the area that currently or are willing to pick up from either/both of their schools.
  • Their are a couple of local nurseries that do after school club and they collect the kids from school and walk back to their premises. 1 of my kids is a flight risk so I do not feel comfortable with this as an option. He has escaped and ran off from his old school twice before.
  • We cannot afford a nanny, prices are between £15 - 20 and hour when I have enquired and tbh, given my kids additional needs, I don't think anyone would last a week with them, they are VERY full on.
  • My dad can collect the kids 1 day a week at an absolute push but it's his only day off and if he has plans it's not a given he can do it, I don't expect him to plan his life around MY kids. My dad works the other 4 days a week and my mom doesn't work but has stopped driving for health reasons so cannot pick them up and she is not physically able to walk/get the bus etc and as previously stated, 1 of them is a flight risk and she wouldnt be able to run after him if needed. A taxi for her to pick them up and go back to hers would be far too expensive multiple times a week as she has done this once before in an emergency and it was £30 for one pick up, let alone 2.
  • There are no other parents at either of their schools that we know well enough to ask. We have no other friends or family in the area at all, aside from my mom and dad.
  • So far, on days where my husband is in the office, I finish work at 14:40, pick up the kids from school and then log on at home for the remainder of the day, sometimes beyond 5pm.
  • I am a supervisor and our team is growing and I will be responsible for up to 12 people eventually so work are saying I cannot effectively supervise if I am not in the office. We also have a lot of new team members (one being another supervisor) who are not fully trained so things tend to fall to shit a lot of them time if I am not there.
  • Not to toot my own horn but i am the glue that holds the entire team together, and effectively, if I were to leave because I need more long term flexibility, they would be absolutely fucked. My line manager and our department manager knows this all too well, but are still pressuring me to find some magical solution that doesn't exist so I can be there 8.30-5 every single day. They've not said they will get rid of me, and I don't think they would, but they're saying I need to work my hours I am employed to do. I agree with this and have no issues with that, I've often said I will taken leave, take the time unpaid etc and they have always said no.
  • I could put in a flexible working request to reduce my hours 1-2 days a week, but it would actually be a waste of time, as they can and would refuse it for a legitimate business reason.

I don't know what to do or what I'm supposed to say during this meeting. If you've thought of something I haven't explored above then please please let me know. I'm obviously going to explain all of the above in detail about what I've looked into and why it's not a viable option and see what they say. I'm also considering telling them I'm looking else where for something more flexible in the hope that they back down, but I don't actually want to leave, I really do enjoy working there and don't want to jump ship and end up being somewhere I don't like, or having to take a pay cut that I can't really afford.

OP posts:
ThisMellowCat · 16/04/2026 01:00

Not sure if you are uk based but if so you could go on turn2us or entitledto, and see if it would be more beneficial to cut your hours. Put different scenarios in and see what benefits are available and what works best for you.
either that or get your partner to do a bit more rather than you running around like a headless chicken trying to be in all places at once.

BudgetBuster · 16/04/2026 08:05

ThisMellowCat · 16/04/2026 01:00

Not sure if you are uk based but if so you could go on turn2us or entitledto, and see if it would be more beneficial to cut your hours. Put different scenarios in and see what benefits are available and what works best for you.
either that or get your partner to do a bit more rather than you running around like a headless chicken trying to be in all places at once.

The OP has already found a solution and updated the post with same.

Her partner is already doing 3 of the childcare days so I'm not even sure why you'd suggest he should be doing more?

NoCommentingFromNowOn · 16/04/2026 10:18

BudgetBuster · 16/04/2026 08:05

The OP has already found a solution and updated the post with same.

Her partner is already doing 3 of the childcare days so I'm not even sure why you'd suggest he should be doing more?

Effin’ ‘ell luv, you’re not expecting people to actually read OP’s posts, even though there is one button to make it incredibly easy to select only those posts are you?

😂

Seriously, this is the most annoying type of comment. I saw one once, a woman was asking for advice re an issue with her eight year old’s school. People were somehow still commenting when the ‘child’ was old enough to have left school.

Reading is difficult innit?

Kirschcherries · 16/04/2026 20:12

@FriskyHeeler I am so glad your employer has been sensible and open to working with you to achieve a good outcome.

I like the intensive programme to upskill others. This is a double bonus as it gives your employer more flexibility to spread work around and it is development for staff which is hopefully motivating.

Bluedenimdoglover · 17/04/2026 11:19

I appreciate you are in a quandary with child care issues, but you have clearly stated what you can't do to fulfill your employer's reasonable requests.

At the meeting you have to put to them what you can do - and you have said you have no viable options.
You can bite the bullet and use the nursery paying for a taxi for the transfer from school to nursery to reduce the chance of your child absconding.

You can explain your predicament to your father who may well be prepared to step up and help on a fixed day each week. You are stuck and no matter how much you prefer not to ask, this may be a part solution - you should not second guess what he would or would not do.

You can propose to formally reduce your hours and renegotiate a work pattern to suit you and your employer.

If you continue to maintain you have no viable options, then you will have to face them with it and accept their decision.

CDTC · 17/04/2026 11:31

Bluedenimdoglover · 17/04/2026 11:19

I appreciate you are in a quandary with child care issues, but you have clearly stated what you can't do to fulfill your employer's reasonable requests.

At the meeting you have to put to them what you can do - and you have said you have no viable options.
You can bite the bullet and use the nursery paying for a taxi for the transfer from school to nursery to reduce the chance of your child absconding.

You can explain your predicament to your father who may well be prepared to step up and help on a fixed day each week. You are stuck and no matter how much you prefer not to ask, this may be a part solution - you should not second guess what he would or would not do.

You can propose to formally reduce your hours and renegotiate a work pattern to suit you and your employer.

If you continue to maintain you have no viable options, then you will have to face them with it and accept their decision.

If you read the thread you'll see that the issue has been resolved.

NoCommentingFromNowOn · 17/04/2026 14:27

Bluedenimdoglover · 17/04/2026 11:19

I appreciate you are in a quandary with child care issues, but you have clearly stated what you can't do to fulfill your employer's reasonable requests.

At the meeting you have to put to them what you can do - and you have said you have no viable options.
You can bite the bullet and use the nursery paying for a taxi for the transfer from school to nursery to reduce the chance of your child absconding.

You can explain your predicament to your father who may well be prepared to step up and help on a fixed day each week. You are stuck and no matter how much you prefer not to ask, this may be a part solution - you should not second guess what he would or would not do.

You can propose to formally reduce your hours and renegotiate a work pattern to suit you and your employer.

If you continue to maintain you have no viable options, then you will have to face them with it and accept their decision.

Always, always check OPs posts before replying. It’s a lot quicker.

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