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Mental health

I need some opinions on whether my life is crap or not

29 replies

meeshy · 10/07/2007 19:49

Let me summarise where I am right now - I am a 40 year old mum of 3 great boys aged 6, 5 and 2. I am the quintessential busy working mum with a stressful job that needs me to travel extensively in the Uk and Europe often without much notice.

Trouble is, my husband has that sort of job too and consequently we spend all our time trying to sychronise diaries and failing, with me feeling like I am having to give excuses all the time for not coming to meetings when really it is because husband is in Madrid or wherever.

So we see little of each other in the week and every other weekend he is off to see his sick dad at the other end of the country. I feel like we can;t carry on as we are but not sure how to make it right. I really don't want to give my job up as I've worked really hard to get to where I am and all the other careers I've looked at don't stack up money wise, meaning you basically spend your salary on childcare.

Advice gratefully received !

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 21:30

Excellent - so that's your first step. Then what about thinking about flexible working - maybe slightly reducing your hours - or even taking a career break.

Good Luck

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 21:22

I am definately going to talk to a girl at our nursery who babysits for us sometimes and who the kids love.

It could just be the lifeline I need in an emergency when both of us are away.

Reading your replies has made me realise that there are lots of options, not just jacking it all in but thinking a bit creatively about what the problems are and how to resolve.

Trouble is I find that we tend to spend our salaries and have a lifestyle of nice hols and stuff which is a hard habit to break !

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Flum · 10/07/2007 21:18

yeah sounds a bit rubbish. most people have crazy busy lives these days. I spose if you could bring yourself to do it you could ask for a career break for a year, just to get your head back to gether and back on course

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 21:16

Well - why not have a word with some of the key carers at the nursery - when my dd was at nursery several parents had arrangements with one or two girls to provide emergency cover - they had keys to the house and if the mum and dad had to dash off they would take the kids home and put them to bed etc. They also used to babysit. And they would stay over. Of course you have to trust them and pay them - but that might work for you.

I find I have to be very very strict with my diary - I book out every Friday and everyone knows that I don't do meetings etc on Fridays - I do calls, but not meetings. I have to protect it!

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Legacy · 10/07/2007 21:13

Meeshy - I didn't feel sad as such, because I came to a realisation that the choices I had made in having a family, and the beliefs I had about the way I wanted them to be cared for, meant that I would never be able to reach the top of my career anyway.

So, for example, having made the decision to have children, I didn't feel that I wanted to hand them over 12/24 hours a day to a nanny, which is what I would have had to do to 'compete' with the blokes in my field who had full time wives doing all the childcare/ housekeeping.

Also I realised that my sense of priorities had changed - I was getting irritated by pointless travel to meetings (when a teleconference would have done) as it was taking me away from bedtime stories, or annoyed with last minute deadlines which ate into family weekends together.

If I had to describe my emotions at this time, they were more 'anger' and 'frustration' rather than sadness. For a while I was angry that no one had told me that having children would have such an impact of my time and career, and then I was angry and frustrated that my company was so inflexible about any REAL options to let me balance work/ home life. I also went through I stage of being angry with DH - for not earning enough money to let me do just one thing properly, either by paying for enough childcare, or supporting us totally if I just did the 'mum at home' thing. I was angry for all the usual "why do I have to do half the work and most of the household/ school stuff" reasons.

It's now a couple of years since I left, and in that time I've thrown myself partially into school/ PTA, as I thought that this is what part-time working mothers do. However I have to say I have found it massively unfulfilling ( - sorry!) so in September I'm going to be ploughing lots of time into the next stage development of my consultancy work, but still trying to be around for the kids from 4 pm most days.

It's a bit of a chick-lit read, but get hold of the novel "I don't know how she does it" - it's all about exactly these feelings, and it will make you laugh a lot if nothing else. That's if you can find time to read it, of course....

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:54

Legacy, your choice of words is frighteningly close to home - I tell white lies all the time, feel guilty and do way too much juggling.

When you gave up your job didn't you feel sad after all the time you had put in getting to where you were in your career ?

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:51

2 yr old is in nursery etc and everyone is giving great advice but do you know what I am scared of doing something different with the kids, getting a nanny in who I don't know, because the nursery is so good and it is also the other one's before and after school club.

I am frightened of making it worse !!

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suzycreamcheese · 10/07/2007 20:51

tbh your lifestyle sounds hectic (travel extensively not much notice)..i would personally hate to miss the everyday stuff from those years..its only there for such a short time..

if you like being quintessential busy working mum ...if you or your partner dont want to change work / jobs / patterns...then i cant see where any change can take place...

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Legacy · 10/07/2007 20:50

Meeshy - about 3 years ago DH & I were in a very similar situation.
Our kids were similar ages too.
We were way too stressed, and our health and our relationship was suffering.

We had an au pair and it helped, but it just still wasn't really right, I felt like I was short-changing everyone all round - myself included.

In the end I decided I we just couldn't go on any longer and I left my full-time job and set up as a part-time contractor.

It hasn't all been a bed of roses, but on balance it was the right decision. I still miss the buzz of work and the friendship of office colleagues, but I dont miss all the juggling and white lies to try to make it all work, oh, and I certainly don't miss the guilt.

I think your children are getting to the age when they become even more demanding, and school needs are greater too. I really think you need to sit down with your DH and decide what you both want, what you need (in £ terms) and how to achieve it.

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SSSandy2 · 10/07/2007 20:49

oops crossed posts sorry!

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SSSandy2 · 10/07/2007 20:48

what is the MAIN thing causing your unhappiness? It's hard to tackle 10 different things at once.

Is it that you cannot put yourself 100% into your job because you're held back by the demands of your dh's job (and therefore the need to make childcare arrangements at short notice).

If that's the MAIN problem right now. Maybe you need to try and deal with that first. You don't want live-in help so what other solution could there be? I would also throw that one past dh

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:47

Leafturner it sounds like you have a good balance - I work from home sometimes too but every week is different and there are often 'crises' which mean, for example, I have to travel 250 miles to Maidenhead on Thursday - yuk.

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 20:47

Is two year old in nursery ? Might be worth replacing nursery fees with nanny fees and reaping the rewards of the extra help, flexibility etc - she would pick up the older ones etc - and be able to stay late, even sleep over if you set it all up right.

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quadrophenia · 10/07/2007 20:47

Getting a mothers help sounds a great idea. Have you spoken to your husband about how you are feeling?

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:46

I would like to stay doing my job but not get a sick feeling when I realise I need to be somewhere but husband is already away.

I have got to get a network of support instead of thinking that there is a fab job out there which does not need me to travel - I don;t think there is.

But it needs to be someone I trust - mothers help is an interesting option.

But the 2 yr old is so mummified !

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 20:45

Do you have flexible working where you are Meeshy ? I work one day a week from home and leave early two of the four days I am in the office. I do have to do email and stuff from home - but it's worth it !

Could you do something like that to give you a bit more time with the children ?

Also - do you have a cleaner and an ironer ? I have both and that has really helped hugely - we can enjoy weekends now - rather than them being a drudge !

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quadrophenia · 10/07/2007 20:41

then something has to give Meeshy, I'm not sure what though. What are your options? What would ideally be the situation in which you think you would be happier?

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 20:40

I don't know if I am happy - I am always too busy to think about it !

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:40

No I don't think I am happy

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quadrophenia · 10/07/2007 20:39

are you happy?

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 20:39

Well then I would live with the weekend trips to his Dad.

You can get a part-time Nanny (live out) maybe a mothers help would do. I need someone like this myself - I have looked on Gumtree and there are always people on there who look quite good.

Would you be able to say which days you'd need them - I think you'd have to specify really - and then hope they might have some flexibility if other things cropped up.

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CantSleepWontSleep · 10/07/2007 20:38

Would a job share be an option for you (in your current job)?

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meeshy · 10/07/2007 20:36

The dad is really sick so it is a short term thing and i really don't mind him doing it.

The au pair thing is just what I have been thinking of - someone who can pick the kids up from nursery and after school club the odd time when we won't be back til later in the evening.

But I wouldn't want anyone to live with us and it wouldn't be every day/

Could do with a fairy godmother...

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LeafTurner · 10/07/2007 20:33

You need an aupair I think - so that there is someone there to rely on if you and your dh have to be away. Maybe a nanny would be better - but dearer - I don't know. But I do know how this feels, I only have the one child and don't need to travel much, and only within the UK, but I also find myself having to make excuses when dh is away.

My dh very much considers that he can swan off without a by your leave - whereas if I need to be away I have to plan very far ahead - liek a military operation !

Re his sick dad - how sick ? Is this a temp arrangement until the inevitable - so quite short term to cope with, or is it a long haul thing ?

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WideWebWitch · 10/07/2007 20:29

And could you or your husband negotiate some working from home/compressed hours/teleconferencing rather than flying to meetings? (note I don't necessarily think it sould be YOU who asks for/gets this!)

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