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Challenging Work/Custody Time Problem - Need Suggestions
I'm a divorced father with 50% custody of my 11 year old daughter. I
have her for one week, then she goes to her mom's, then she comes back to me for a week, etc. I'm unemployed and looking for full-time work. I'm anticipating a major problem, though, when I find a job. I don't know how I'll be able to squeeze in an 8 hour day, plus commuting time, between the earliest I can drop my kid off at school and the latest I can pick her up. (I already feel bad about not spending the maximum amount of time with her, but an unemployed father isn't doing her any good.) For example, I can take her to school around 7:30 AM and pick her up as late as 5:30. That's a 10 hour window. But around here (central NJ) commuting can take 1-2 hours each way. I'm willing to work through lunch, but the stress of getting to work on time and hoping I can leave on time to pick her up will wear me down every day. Hopefully, I'll find a sympathetic employer who'll let me do some telecommuting or work out some flextime arrangement. But I'm trying to prepare for the worst. I'm sure I'm not the first guy to face this problem. I'd love to hear about some solutions others have come up with or any advice that might help. Thanks! |
#2
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Challenging Work/Custody Time Problem - Need Suggestions
I am another Jersey-ite as well, from the southern part. Does your
daughter's school have an after-school program? Here, the programs are typically from 7 to 6. There are private daycares in the area that open up earlier (6:30 a.m.) and have after-school programs, but it may take a little legwork to find them. Our after-school program here is very good and reasonable in price as well. Also, for the townships that do not offer an after-school program, the local YMCA offers a program located within the schools; here it is called Prime Time. Good luck in your quest. You're right, the whole child-care issue produces an enormous amount of anxiety. And New Jersey, despite its proximity to the large cities of NY and Philadelphia, can seem pretty backwards in terms of arranging child care and getting information. I lived in Maryland for 10 years so I can attest that other states are different. Is you ex close enough that you can trade off school drop off and pick up? When I was married I did that since my ex and I were in the DC area and had horrendous commutes.Also, maybe there is someone in your daughter's class who can trade off the pick up and drop off. There may be other single parents who are in the same boat as you are. You might have to restrict where you will work because you don't want to be a nervous wreck getting to and from work on time. I don't apply for jobs in Edison because I know I'll have a nervous breakdown if I run late coming home. Regardless, make sure you have a plan B. I've phoned friends from the Turnpike to pick up my daughter if I'm running late. BTW, I've been lurking here on and off for a little while and am a divorced (6 years) mother of a 10 year old girl. I am from southern NJ (metro Philadelphia). Lisa W. in the very flooded southern part of the Garden State "Scott" wrote in message om... I'm a divorced father with 50% custody of my 11 year old daughter. I have her for one week, then she goes to her mom's, then she comes back to me for a week, etc. I'm unemployed and looking for full-time work. I'm anticipating a major problem, though, when I find a job. I don't know how I'll be able to squeeze in an 8 hour day, plus commuting time, between the earliest I can drop my kid off at school and the latest I can pick her up. (I already feel bad about not spending the maximum amount of time with her, but an unemployed father isn't doing her any good.) For example, I can take her to school around 7:30 AM and pick her up as late as 5:30. That's a 10 hour window. But around here (central NJ) commuting can take 1-2 hours each way. I'm willing to work through lunch, but the stress of getting to work on time and hoping I can leave on time to pick her up will wear me down every day. Hopefully, I'll find a sympathetic employer who'll let me do some telecommuting or work out some flextime arrangement. But I'm trying to prepare for the worst. I'm sure I'm not the first guy to face this problem. I'd love to hear about some solutions others have come up with or any advice that might help. Thanks! |
#3
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Challenging Work/Custody Time Problem - Need Suggestions
Personally, I think the week on / week off is not the ideal......have you
thought about a different arrangement...i.e Mon / Tues and alt Fri-Sun.....it might make it easier to get an work schedule, and it will be easier on the kid WRT....the same activites are associated with one house or the other....i.e gym class on Tues....always with Dad, girl scouts on Wedns.....always with mom..... You might also consider car pooling, you take the kids in the morning, someone else brings them home......and find a job closer to home. "Scott" wrote in message om... I'm a divorced father with 50% custody of my 11 year old daughter. I have her for one week, then she goes to her mom's, then she comes back to me for a week, etc. I'm unemployed and looking for full-time work. I'm anticipating a major problem, though, when I find a job. I don't know how I'll be able to squeeze in an 8 hour day, plus commuting time, between the earliest I can drop my kid off at school and the latest I can pick her up. (I already feel bad about not spending the maximum amount of time with her, but an unemployed father isn't doing her any good.) For example, I can take her to school around 7:30 AM and pick her up as late as 5:30. That's a 10 hour window. But around here (central NJ) commuting can take 1-2 hours each way. I'm willing to work through lunch, but the stress of getting to work on time and hoping I can leave on time to pick her up will wear me down every day. Hopefully, I'll find a sympathetic employer who'll let me do some telecommuting or work out some flextime arrangement. But I'm trying to prepare for the worst. I'm sure I'm not the first guy to face this problem. I'd love to hear about some solutions others have come up with or any advice that might help. Thanks! |
#4
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Challenging Work/Custody Time Problem - Need Suggestions
I'm a divorced father with 50% custody of my 11 year old daughter. I
have her for one week, then she goes to her mom's, then she comes back to me for a week, etc. I'm unemployed and looking for full-time work. I'm anticipating a major problem, though, when I find a job. I don't know how I'll be able to squeeze in an 8 hour day, plus commuting time, between the earliest I can drop my kid off at school and the latest I can pick her up. (I already feel bad about not spending the maximum amount of time with her, but an unemployed father isn't doing her any good.) For example, I can take her to school around 7:30 AM and pick her up as late as 5:30. That's a 10 hour window. But around here (central NJ) commuting can take 1-2 hours each way. I'm willing to work through lunch, but the stress of getting to work on time and hoping I can leave on time to pick her up will wear me down every day. Hopefully, I'll find a sympathetic employer who'll let me do some telecommuting or work out some flextime arrangement. But I'm trying to prepare for the worst. I'm sure I'm not the first guy to face this problem. I'd love to hear about some solutions others have come up with or any advice that might help. Thanks! deep sigh Welcome to the working parent's club. Here is where the "you can have it all" farce/lie comes to bear. It's a tough position and I've been there (even in NJ!). 5 years ago, I got laid off.... I received a job offer making 90K/yr plus travel expenses (A dream job right?)..... here's the catch.... I had to be gone from home 3 months at a stretch. My son was then 9 so basically I would have had a nanny raising my child (single parent, absent ex). Instead, I settled for a job making 1/3 that allowed me to parent my son. Sometimes these are the hardest choices, but consider..... in the grand scheme of things...... your child is young for only a short amount of time. You have the rest of your adulthood to chase the career you want, worst case, your primary "parenting" will last only another 7 years until you are too "uncool" for her to associate with and she goes off to college. Isn't a childhood full of parenting better than a step up the corporate ladder? Find a local job that's in your field but may pay less.... parenting is priceless and the ROI is limitless. Just my 2 cents......... Christine |
#5
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Challenging Work/Custody Time Problem - Need Suggestions
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