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Shanna2
May 9th, 2005, 08:06 AM
Master the working-mom shuffle
This Mother's Day lose the guilt and look at the bright side of balancing kids and career.
May 8, 2005: 9:50 AM EDT
By Sarah Max, CNN/Money senior writer


SALEM, Ore. (CNN/Money) - Like many working moms, I sometimes fantasize about quitting my job to spend all day every day doing art projects and play dates with my soon-to-be three-year-old twin daughters, Fiona and Isabel.

Instead, I work four days a week, count on my husband to take on key parenting duties and "let someone else raise my children" about 25 hours a week. (Someone else, where were you last night? The kids woke me up three different times.)

Like a lot of working moms, there are days or weeks when I feel guilty and completely overwhelmed.

Take recently, when I overheard Isabel tell Fiona, "When the little hand gets on the five, then you can have your mommy."

I was heartbroken. I deconstructed that sentence a hundred times. "I pick them up at 4 o'clock, so why would Isabel say 5 o'clock?"

I talked to my friends about juggling kids and career. "It's always on my mind, especially lately," said my friend Rima. "Sometimes I'm up at 4 a.m. just to get the hours in."

I talked to my editor, came close to quitting my job, and then decided I wouldn't be happy expressing myself with construction paper. I also decided I'd wasted so many of my precious work hours obsessing about my issues I better turn the experience into something productive.

So in honor of Mother's Day, I've been frantically researching the working mother's struggle to balance children, marriage, household, career and selfish indulgences, like showering and sleeping.

The bad news: There are still only 24 hours in the day.

The good news: Research shows that children who go to daycare are not destined to be juvenile delinquents. Employers are waking up to the advantages of flexible work schedules. Dads are taking on more parenting duties -- and kids are better for it even if their clothes don't always match.

In fact, working moms would be wise to take cues from their working-dad husbands.

Guilt is not a daily emotion for most working dads, said Carol Evans, CEO of Working Mother Media, publisher of Working Mother (http://www.workingmother.com/) magazine, and mother of two teenagers. "They are very proud of the time they spend with their children," she said.

Look at the bright side.

Daycare is not damagingResearch shows that children who go to "day school" are no better or worse off than those who stay home. "Whether a child is in childcare or not doesn't seem to make a difference," said Sarah Friedman, project scientist and scientific coordinator for the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development study of early child care and youth development, which began tracking infants in 1991.

Although children who spend long hours in daycare may be slightly more prone to behavior problems -- just as adults who spend too much time at the office may be prone to behavior problems -- "the majority of children are in a normal range," said Friedman. "The worries that people had are not well-founded for the majority of the children."

A better predictor of how the child will do is the family environment and -- interestingly enough -- household income. "More income seems to create conditions more favorable to development," said Friedman, explaining that this could be for any number of reasons, including that kids pick up on parents' stress over money matters.

Dads now in on the balancing actEvery morning while I'm in my office a few feet away from my house, I watch the silhouette of my husband as he runs around making breakfast, packing lunches and getting my daughters dressed for school.

"Do you think you'd be doing this if I didn't work in the mornings?" I asked him this morning.

"No way -- I'm not genetically programmed to match outfits and do ponytails," he said.

Yet he and many of his friends are doing exactly that. They're staying home with sick kids, working four-day weeks, asking their employers for extended paternity leave and taking on duties that have traditionally fallen to mothers. "To put it bluntly, I wouldn't allow my husband to not share some of the responsibilities," said my friend Shelley.

"This is a phenomenon we're really seeing with your generation," said Evans, referring to a study by the Families and Work Institute that found that Gen X fathers spend an hour more a day with their children than fathers did 25 years ago. "It's a huge shift."

Working mothers should embrace this change and encourage it. "Women tend to want to have things done their way," she said. "But instead of micromanaging how things in the house work, let them have some control."

In other words, ignore the crooked ponytails and don't worry if the whites and darks all get mixed together.

Have it all? How about a compromise?After my friend Gretchen had her son, Jack, she assumed that she would go back to work, same hours, same career path. "You like to think you're the same career-driven person and having a kid won't change me," she said.

But motherhood did change her, and Gretchen has no regrets. First she took a cut in pay and title to work four days a week instead of five. Then she left her company to work as a consultant three days a week. "It was a huge risk," she said. "But I feel like I have a perfect balance -- well, usually."

Gretchen and a lot of working moms have had to carve out their own jobs to find the perfect balance, but more companies are offering official flextime, telecommuting and job share policies.

"We're seeing a big increase in these benefits," said Evans, whose company ranks the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers. "Flexibility is the number one program parents are looking for in the workplace."

Parents, she said, are saying "You can have it all, just not all at once."

Click here to read "She makes more than he does (http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/19/pf/breadwinner_0505/index.htm)."

Work or stay home? Click here (http://money.cnn.com/2005/05/06/pf/saving/willis_tips/index.htm) for 5 Tips on making the decision.

Wendy
May 9th, 2005, 08:55 AM
Awesome!! Thanks for posting this....it is really nice to see that all of the things you deal with as a working mom are not you just making yourself crazy :)

kim
May 9th, 2005, 09:08 AM
what? my kids won't be deliquents while i let someone else raise them?! :lol:

Hannabanana
May 9th, 2005, 09:12 AM
:thumbsup:

Shanna
May 9th, 2005, 09:25 AM
Wow... what a great article for a Monday morning :nod:

Trish
May 9th, 2005, 10:28 AM
Thanks! I feel a little better, now :)

Bonnie
May 9th, 2005, 05:00 PM
Good article. I just wish the whole "flex time" "telecommute" etc. would really be true in more places. Also, more company daycare.

bunkie68
May 9th, 2005, 05:25 PM
Good article. I just wish the whole "flex time" "telecommute" etc. would really be true in more places. Also, more company daycare.

No kidding, Bonnie. :nod:

Good article, thanks for sharing it!

Shanna2
May 9th, 2005, 09:16 PM
Here's another one that someone sent me. How do these people have so many kids? :lol:

The Mother Load
In honor of Mother's Day, we asked one extraordinary in-house lawyer (and multitasking expert) to tell us about her typical day

Wendy Hufford (letters_to_the_editor@corp.law.com)
Corporate Counsel (http://www.corpcounsel.com/)
04-21-2005


If busy people are happy people, my husband and I, working parents of seven, must be in a perpetual state of bliss. We've been married 16 years and have seven children, ages 3 to 14, with one more on the way. Here's a typical day in my life.

6:55 a.m. The alarm sounds. Sleeping peacefully to my right are my 3- and 6-year-old daughters; lying at the foot of the bed is my 8-year-old son. Sometime last night, my husband has retreated to less crowded territory, the bedroom sofa. I dash into the shower, putting on the radio to get my five-minute dose of the morning news. I quickly dress in business casual clothes, put on makeup, jewelry, and dry my hair.

7:30 a.m. I gently wake the five younger children and shepherd them into the care of my live-in South African au pair, who gets them dressed and down to breakfast. My oldest two are already heading toward the door with their backpacks and my husband, who will drop them off at school on his way to catch the train to his New York law firm. I check the cats, the rabbit, the hamster, the fish, and the crab to make sure they've been fed. I head down to the kitchen and chat with the little ones over breakfast. On the way out the door, I pet the dogs on the front porch.

8:10 a.m. I de-ice the car and put in a CD with my latest novel. My 18 minutes of relaxation begin as I drive up I-95 to my Stamford, Conn., office.

8:30 a.m. I stop off at the company cafeteria and get a Starbucks coffee and a toasted bagel. Eating breakfast at my desk, I check my e-mail. I spend the first hour of my day going through my "to-do" list, returning calls and e-mails, reviewing new complaints, e-mailing my managers about any significant developments or new matters that they need to be aware of, checking my calendar, and organizing and reviewing any necessary materials for whatever calls and meetings are scheduled that day.

9:30 a.m. My first call, usually to Europe to give advice on a significant litigation. I work furiously until lunch, ticking off to-do list items as I do them.

1:00 p.m. I zip down to the cafeteria, grab a large salad, and return to my desk. I call home, checking in with the au pair and the little kids and then spend 10 to 15 minutes dealing with my life by ordering a new appliance online, scheduling a doctor's appointment, e-mailing my husband to remind him to pick up milk on the way home from the train, and arranging for my mother to cover a Scouts ceremony that I can't attend because of work.

1:30 p.m. I am back on the job, attending meetings and participating in conference calls. I often use my speakerphone and pace around my office with two-pound hand weights to get some exercise. If I'm under the gun, I put a hotel "do not disturb" sign on my closed door.

3:00 p.m. Time for a strong cup of Dunkin' Donuts French Vanilla coffee, which I brew in my office.

6:40 p.m. I clear my desk, taking home anything I have not yet gotten to, unplug my BlackBerry, and put it into my purse. I spend the next 20 minutes relaxing with my audio novel as I drive home.

7:00 p.m. I pet the dogs on my way in to greet my younger children. I review the mail, sign permission slips, and go upstairs to put on my pajamas, accompanied by my 3-year-old daughter, who will remain my shadow for the rest of the night. I go back downstairs to chat with my older children, who are usually on the computer instant messaging their friends.

7:30 p.m. My husband arrives home and we sit down to a relaxing 15-minute dinner prepared by our housekeeper. Some of the kids keep us company at the kitchen table.

7:45 p.m. Time to divide and conquer. I take my three youngest upstairs, and we spend the next 45 minutes reading, talking, and playing games together. At the kitchen table, my husband checks the homework of our 14-, 12-, 10- and 8-year-olds.

8:30 p.m. Bedtime for the twin 6-year-olds while I read a chapter or two of A Series of Unfortunate Events to my 8-year-old son and talk about his day.

9:00 p.m. Teeth are brushed and three of the little ones are in bed, but not the 3-year-old night owl, who continues to follow me around. My husband and I next persuade the older two boys to shut the PlayStation, computer, or TV off and get into bed. It doesn't always work -- most of the time they manage to stretch bedtime out to about 10 p.m.

10:00 p.m. My husband brings up our traditional bowl of Healthy Choice ice cream for us to share in front of the TV. We brush the 3-year-old's teeth, and she finally falls asleep between us. I sort the mail, putting events into my BlackBerry calendar, and respond to the e-mails that have come in since I have left the office.

11:00 p.m. We watch the news. Our 14-year-old daughter pops in to talk and say good night. I carry the 3-year-old to her own bed.

11:30 p.m. My husband changes the channel to "Everybody Loves Raymond." I am out like a light and never see the end of the show. At some point during the night, my 3-year-old joins us in bed. By morning, my 6-year-old daughter and 8-year-old son have taken my husband's place yet again.

Wendy Hufford is senior global litigation counsel at GE Consumer Finance in Stamford, Conn.

Dennis
May 9th, 2005, 09:24 PM
My first thought on this one is it's just sad. They have 7 kids and and she's gone 11 hours a day and he's gone 12.

Dennis

Brooke
May 9th, 2005, 10:31 PM
Yeah, those are some really long hours. I can't imagine why they need to work that long every day. It sounds like they like it that way. I can see how they get by, though - the nanny and the housekeeper help alot. They most likely never have to clean, cook, or do laundry - all the things I never seem to get to with only one child.

Trish
May 10th, 2005, 09:00 AM
Dang, she barely sees her kids? What's the point in having that many children if you can't even spend that much time with them? That may not sound right, but I just don't know how I feel about that whole article? Yes, having a nanny and a housekeeper would be a GREAT help to me, because then I wouldn't have to worry about those things, but she can't even make it to all of her children's events and sends her mother in her place? As a working mom, I kind of admire her, but I also feel sorry for her? I just don't know? I'm confused now.....

kim
May 10th, 2005, 10:35 AM
i'm trying to figure out when they had time to conceive all those kids :lol:

ya, they work WAY too many hours, that's just ridiculous.

my first thought was she gets up pretty late :lol:

Dennis
May 10th, 2005, 10:44 AM
I agree Kim - I would love to sleep that late during the week.

sheila
May 10th, 2005, 10:52 AM
:lol: I'm at home and I would still love to sleep that late!

Shanna2
May 10th, 2005, 10:56 AM
:lol: I wondered why didn't get up earlier so that she could come home earlier.

Bonnie
May 10th, 2005, 05:52 PM
I never get up that EARLY!! But I only work about 10 minutes from my house and don't tell anyone, but I don't always shower :lol:

I was just glad to see someone else with a 3 year old in her bed!

schwanda
May 11th, 2005, 11:11 AM
That article actually sounds a bit like us, only we have one kid and not seven. I'm up at 5am and out the door by 6am. I rarely see Nathaniel before work. Some days I'm home by 5pm but usually it's more like 6 or 7pm. We do the best we can with the time we have. And I'm not planning to work these hours for much longer!

Amanda

bunkie68
May 11th, 2005, 11:30 AM
I'd love to sleep that late, too - I can't even imagine. Julian seldom lets me sleep that late even on weekends! :lol:

And my day is a lot like that, with just one. I'm usually up by 5:30, start waking Julian up at 6:30, finally get him out of bed at 6:45 or so, drop him off at daycare between 7:20 and 7:40, go to work, leave work at 5:00, and pick him up around 6:00. I'm a prisoner of the commute - I hate it, but there aren't any job options closer to home.

And geez, if you lead that kind of busy life, why have SEVEN kids?! Why not stop after two or three? I don't get that. Why have so many children if you can't spend any time with them?

And one more thing - how is a 15-minute dinner relaxing? :scratch: Sounds like you gulp your food down and run to me. :lol:

Dennis
May 11th, 2005, 11:41 AM
And geez, if you lead that kind of busy life, why have SEVEN kids?! Why not stop after two or three? I don't get that. Why have so many children if you can't spend any time with them?

Exactly!

And one more thing - how is a 15-minute dinner relaxing? :scratch: Sounds like you gulp your food down and run to me. :lol:

I think 15 minutes is plenty of time to eat when someone else does the cooking and the cleanup.

kim
May 11th, 2005, 12:26 PM
I think 15 minutes is plenty of time to eat when someone else does the cooking and the cleanup.

AND watches the kids :lol:

bunkie68
May 11th, 2005, 01:13 PM
I think 15 minutes is plenty of time to eat when someone else does the cooking and the cleanup.

Well, yeah, good point. :lol2: I'm sure I could get a lot more done in a lot less time if someone else did the cooking and cleanup. :lol:

Bonnie
May 11th, 2005, 03:06 PM
I e-mailed that to a friend of mine who is also a working mom with 3 kids... her reaction was #1 how'd they manage to make an 8th baby and #2 with a live in au pair and a housekeeper that cooks, she has it pretty easy. And I agree... if I had someone in my house all the time to take care of my kids and had another person to take care of cooking and cleaning, what would there really be for me to do? This woman sounds like she has it together, but she has a LOT of help and is not a true example of mastering the working mom shuffle... she barely has to do anything at home. Think of all you could get done if you had live in help AND a maid/cook!!