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to work or not to work

<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To work or not to work&quest; That is the question most moms ponder&period; Really&comma; there’s no right answer&period; It’s what works best for you and your family&period; I vividly remember as a young girl thinking that I would most definitely&comma; &lpar;if afforded the chance&rpar;&comma; stay home to raise our children the way my husband and I saw fit&period; Then as I grew older&comma; I decided that I needed to establish myself&comma; my career&comma; after all I worked my butt off to get a degree and was still paying off student loans&excl; I was the prodigal latchkey kid&comma; while my mom went off to work during the women’s equal rights movement&comma; to afford us the life we so deserved&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; when the time came for us to conceive&comma; I thought to myself&comma; well I can’t very well give up everything I’ve worked so tirelessly for&period; So&comma; I worked day in and day out all throughout my nine months of pregnancy&comma; waddling my way to the bathroom from my desk&comma; covering breaking news&comma; working crazy hours and figuring out schedules between our families&period; The plan was for me to go back to work part-time &lpar;that way I still had my identity&comma; HA&excl;&rpar;&comma; working weekends&comma; so that my mom&comma; mother-in-law and husband would fill in for me on their days off&period; Everyone was on board&comma; yet when the day finally came where I locked eyes with my blue-eyed baby boy&comma; I thought to myself how in the world could I leave&quest; How could I burden my family to take care of our baby on their days off&comma; after reporting to a full-time job&quest; Daycare wouldn’t work&comma; because my paycheck would have gone straight to the people that would have been watching after him&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I remember the day my husband and I made the decision for me to stay home&period; I was partially relieved&comma; partially worried&comma; partially petrified&period; Would I ever be able to get back to my passion&quest; Back to writing&quest; Back to reporting&quest; Producing&quest; Back to being ME&period; I didn’t have an answer at the time&period; The only thing I knew was certain was that I had this little tiny human being who needed me more than anyone&period; He needed me more than I needed to fulfill my dreams&period; More than my place of employment needed me…they would surely find someone to fill my shoes&comma; right&quest; Several people had said if I had the chance to stay home then to take it&period; It’s just a moment in your life and you have the rest of it to work&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A very dear friend of mine&comma; whom I remember calling me in near tears while she was on maternity leave could&&num;8217&semi;t understand the life of a stay at home mom&period; Literally wondering what on earth it was I did all day long&quest; How isolated she felt&period; How she couldn’t wait to get back into the swing of things and get back to working&period; Here’s where it gets tricky&period; Momming is HARD&excl; It is full of GUILT&comma; no matter how you slice it&period; When I first had my son&comma; I too felt alone&comma; isolated&comma; completely intimidated by the idea of having to make sure to keep another human being alive&excl; What happened to all of those cute Instagram pictures of babies all dressed up in their monthly onesies&quest; I felt robbed and I felt guilty&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Heck&comma; I feel guilty every single time I make a purchase outside of groceries&period; I feel guilty that my husband bears the burden of having to work to support our family&period; I feel guilty when I raise my voice at my kids&comma; because we’re in each other’s face all day long&period; After speaking to several moms who work&comma; their guilt stems from not spending enough time with their kids&comma; not making enough &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;mom friends&comma;” not having enough patience…feeling judged&period; Truth is no matter what&comma; we are judged&period; That’s life&period; So what it boils down to is to DO YOU&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We’ve had to make some serious adjustments to our lifestyle since I’ve become a stay at home mom&period; Going out to fancy lunches and dinners regularly&quest; Gone&period; Buying something cute at the mall just because&quest; Gone&period; Spontaneous vacations just to get away&quest; Gone&period; See my point&quest; Where my working moms feel like although they have to work all day&comma; they come back to a clean home&comma; that hasn’t been ravaged by toddlers all day&comma; they have quality over quantity time with their little ones&comma; they’re able to get dressed for the day&comma; eat lunch with adults&comma; have adult conversations that don’t involve potty training or weaning&period; They pee solo and have time to listen to their music on their way to work&period; They may even sneak in a quick trip to the gym or the nail salon&period; They don’t spend their days feeling like a short order cook&comma; chauffer and maid&comma; who has to change diaper after diaper&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Finally&comma; I tried the part-time work thing&period; It was nice at first&comma; but what I found was that I wasn’t able to give enough energy into one thing versus the other&period; I’m the type who devotes 150&percnt; to everything I do and for whatever reason juggling the two wasn’t my forte&period; I made the decision to be 150&percnt; mom&comma; when we got pregnant with our second&period; I have my days when I wonder if I’m cut out to be the stay at home type&period; Am I fulfilling the kids’ days&quest; Are they better off at school&quest; Am I enough&quest; I’ve learned not to be so hard on myself and that yes&comma; I AM ENOUGH&period; I tell my husband all the time that I used to be somebody&excl; That my lowest point was the day I had to clean up after our son who had pooped his pants in public&comma; followed by my daughter’s tantrum in the middle of Whole Foods and topped off with our dog that decided to poop&comma; eat it and throw up&period; TMI&quest; Those are the days that working doesn’t seem so bad after all&period; Hearing my mom say how she used to hug her desk when she got to work&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; I now know that I AM somebody&period; I am this single most important somebody to our beautiful babies and husband&comma; that this is my highest point in life&period; To be able to raise our children and see them grow in front of our very eyes&period; I’m convinced that after a long day of Legos and laundry and cleaning up toys and the throw up&comma; that I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be and that I have made the ultimate sacrifice for my family and hopefully someday they will thank me for it&period; That I am so thankful and forever grateful to my husband to even have the choice&period; So no matter if you sacrifice yourself and your lifestyle to stay home or you sacrifice your time to give your family the life they truly deserve by going to work&comma; you’re ultimately doing the right thing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I wrote this article back in March of 2017&period; Fast-forward TWO WEEKS later&comma; I decided in April to go into business for myself after an opportunity sort of fell into my lap&comma; which I will be forever grateful for&period; To be able to give my family&comma; my children and my children’s children the financial freedom they so deserve&period; With my little boy now in school full-time and toddler who likes to sleep &lpar;thank goodness&excl;&excl;&rpar;&comma; I am now able to forge my passion for writing&comma; blogging&comma; delivering news and videos on important life-changing topics&period; Sure&comma; the days are long and often hard&comma; but maybe that’s just life and maybe just maybe we need to embrace it and celebrate the small wins&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>-Briana D&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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