revjim.net

the flexible future

I’ve been laying awake for over an hour, unable to get back asleep. I live alone, so “accidentally” waking my significant other and/or roommate up in order to have a conversation isn’t an option. And I don’t have any friends that wouldn’t by upset if i called them at 4 in the morning to discuss a problem that technically doesn’t exist for 3 years or so. So then I thought, hey, there’s that guy on the Internet. You know, the one that’s always up? I’ll tell him.

Hey… that’s YOU.

So the problem, in a nutshell, is that in 3 years or so my daughter will be going to school while I’m a working, single parent. (If you happen to be a working, single parent or a family where both parents work, I could really use your insight.)

Right now, I have a pretty decent situation. My employer is very flexible with my hours. Because my daughter’s mom and I do “every other day” custody, it means I can go in really late one day, and then go in to work really early the next. With her mom having the same schedule every day this means that my daughter is in the care of people other than her parents for between 7 and 9 hours each day. Not great, but not terrible either. And very similar to the requirements of public school.

If my employer wasn’t so flexible, then my daughter would be at school for roughly 10 hours each day. Throw in the fact that she sleeps 10-12 hours each day out of school, and that leaves 2 to 4 hours each day to eat dinner, take a bath, drive to school and back and actually enjoy each other. Again, not great, but at least it’s doable.

When my daughter starts real school, I don’t know what I’m going to do. I picked a random local elementary school as an example. The school hours are 8am to 3pm. That’s 7 hours and a set schedule. There’s simply no way I can make that work alone. And, unless her mom can manage to find a schedule as flexible as mine, having “every other day” custody doesn’t really help the siutation any.

So, as I see it, my options are these:

  1. Find a private school with longer hours and figure out how to pay for it. (2-4 hours of family time)
  2. Find an afterschool program that handles child transport and figure out how to pay for it (2-4 hours of family time)
  3. Become very close with a family that lives very close by that I trust with my child and that is also willing to help. Adopt that family as part of my own. Hope with all my might that neither of us every has to move. (5-7 hours of family time 2-4 of which I am present for.)
  4. Make an arrangement with another single parent (guy or girl), another couple, or a romantic interest and tie our lives and living arrangements together for the greater good of both families. (5-7 hours of family time. I could be present for nearly all of them, depending on my schedule and their schedules. Worst case, 2-4 hours I’ll be present for.)
  5. Work for myself with hours that I can set entirely on my own. (5-7 hours of family time for which I would, presumably, be present for all of them except in cases where I needed to work and had to find assistance.)
  6. Join a commune.

Options 1 and 2 are roughly the same, require the most money, the most stable of jobs, and the least amount of outside help.

Options 3 and 4 and better and then better still, but require more and more outside assistance. As you know, I’m very fond of raising my child “in a village” so these options are quite sutiable to me but require lots of outside assistance. Ideally, options 3 and 4 would work best together. Even better than that, would be having multiple families to suit option 3.

Option 5 is of course the best for allowing me to spend the most time with my daughter. However, it’s also the least stable of all since I’d be working for myself and would still require either a good trust worthy babysitter, or a nearby family to help out from time to time.

Option 6 speaks for itself.

All in all, option 4, with multiple option 3s and an option 5 kicker would be the best.

I’ve got less than 3 years to make it happen.

So, now the question.

To all of you single, working parents or coupled parents that both work: how do YOU make it happen?

In most of the single parent cases that I am aware of, extended family fill in all the gaps. This simply isn’t an option for me. My brother is also a single parent. My other brother lives in Vermont. My sister and her husband both work long hours and live far away. My mom is the most likely candidate to help and she’s made it clear that she’s not interested in doing so right now. If she manages to move to Rockwall and if I do to, then she becomes an option.

  • http://twitter.com/mojoquix amanda

    two other options that i've heard of (i don't have kids, so i don't know from experience obviously):

    1) alter your arrangement with her mom. i don't know what her schedule is, or what it will be 3 years from now, or how easy it is to negotiate something like this, but i've seen plenty of divorced parents come up with creative arrangements for just this reason. things like — one parent has the child on a given day, but the other parent picks the child up and has the child until the first parent gets out of work. that sort of thing. i've heard of all sorts of creative arrangements like that. since your schedule with your employer is flexible, this might be doable.

    2) talk to your employer about having some flexible telecommuting time. i've heard of more employers doing this in recent years. could you maybe telecommute some either early in the morning or later on at night so you would have time available to take c to school/pick c up from school/spend time with c after school?

    i know when i was a kid, my parents both worked and didn't have a ton of money, so they relied on the after school program at my elementary school until my sister and i were old enough to be latchkey kids. it wasn't free, but i don't think it was too terribly expensive.

  • http://revjim.net/ Jim Reverend

    Yes! Good options!

    1) This might work. Not sure where she'll be at employment-wise or where either of us will be living then. Right now she lives 30 minutes from me and I don't think she would be too keen on driving even part of that on a daily basis. She doesn't live in a very decent school district so something will have to change between now and then anyway, I imagine. Where I live is rated better, at least at the elementary level, but, it's still very undefined.

    2) Right now this is totally an option. In fact, I do this quite a bit already in order to make as much time for her as possible. Hopefully, in 3 years I'll either be with the same employer or another employer that's just as flexible.

    Good to know that it worked out okay for you guys. And extra good that the two of you had each other. How old were you when you became latchkey kids?

  • http://twitter.com/mojoquix amanda

    i don't recall exactly how old we were when we became latchkey kids? maybe 10? i don't remember exactly.

  • brush

    Another solution: don't worry about that bridge until you're closer to having to cross it.

    Stop the insanity! No more losing sleep over something three years down the line!

  • http://revjim.net/ Jim Reverend

    That would, of course, be the best. But my brain, unfortunately, isn't
    cooperating.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Jonathan-Kelley/8323263 Jonathan Kelley

    I remember walking to school several times in Kindergarten and 1st grade. It was a few blocks away. I'm very much of the mindset that children shouldn't be shielded from the world. I'm not suggesting that's the best solution, but you shouldn't discount the idea right out because you don't think it's safe. We've really become a society of fear and it's truly disheartening.

  • http://revjim.net/ Jim Reverend

    It is disheartening and I'm with you 100%. A lot of parents these days
    are a lot more fearful than I think they need to be. Sure, there is
    rape and murder and kidnapping and all other kinds of stuff out there.
    But, statistically, if I remember right, we're more likely to die in a
    car accident but we all jump in cars every day.

    I'm a big proponent of letting children and explore and, to some
    extent, set their own bounds. If I manage to live close enough to her
    school and have a custody situation where this is an option and if it
    helps our situation (or even just for it's own sake) it's certainly an
    option I'd entertain. Or, some other equally useful options. Like
    latchkey kids, etc.

    On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 3:00 PM,

  • http://twitter.com/debperez Debbie

    Don't fret, there are solutions out there. I know all Plano ISD elementary schools offer PASAR. It's an after-school care program that runs from the time school is out until 6:30. Lots of kids participate in the school my kids attend (the kids I nanny for that is) and it's safe, fun, flexible.

    Relax friend, you have time to figure it all out.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Daniel-James-Lashua/514942252 Daniel James Lashua

    Thank you! That does help a lot.

    What are the ages for PASAR, do you know? How old are your kids?

  • Rachelle

    My kid isn't even born yet and I'm wondering these same questions. I don't have any suggestions, but I do look forward to seeing your eventual decision.

  • http://revjim.net/ Jim Reverend

    As always, I am quite happy to share what I've learned every step of
    the way to keep people from making the same mistakes I have.

    That's what society is supposed to be for… and certainly what
    friends are for.

    On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 5:57 PM,

  • http://revjim.net/ Daniel

    As always, I am quite happy to share what I've learned every step of
    the way to keep people from making the same mistakes I have.

    That's what society is supposed to be for… and certainly what
    friends are for.

    On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 5:57 PM,