Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29548 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
well we're just starting a family through adoption so i don't really have a lot of um concrete um
12
opinions just what i know out of my peer group uh has gone through and none of it's been good
13
14
15
oh really
16
17
18
yeah
19
uh the ones that can afford to have live in nannies they seem to be having an okay time
20
21
22
huh
23
uh-huh
24
25
26
uh but a lot of the other ones that have are professional um i'd say fifty percent of you know my peers that i'm in my circle of friends
27
have tried it and then stopped working until they're you know going to get their children in kindergarten or first grade
28
29
30
um-hum
31
32
33
uh but i there must be some good service out there if you really look and pay for it
34
35
36
right
37
what what age child are you thinking in in terms of
38
39
40
in terms of what they're talking about
41
42
43
no for for yourselves
44
45
46
oh infant um
47
48
49
oh okay so you're starting from the baseline from the baseline
50
51
52
infant
53
yeah after eleven years of marriage yeah we are we're actually it's happening now so we're just going through the process
54
55
56
i see
57
58
59
so and and actually the question is uh very appropriate because i'm not sure whether um
60
how strong the maternal instinct's going to be they tell me it's going to be strong do you have children
61
62
63
right
64
i have one son
65
66
67
and did you put him in day care or is he older now or younger or
68
69
70
well he's now he's now eighteen and in in you know has completed a couple of years of university
71
72
73
sure so he's out of day care
74
75
76
i right and and so that but i was working full-time uh when he was born but i was very lucky because i was a a college professor
77
78
79
you uh-huh
80
oh
81
82
83
and so i was able to you know and i it was walking distance from my from my apartment so i went up there and i sort of left him with with a neighbor
84
85
86
flex
87
yeah
88
um-hum
89
90
91
and i left him in a carry cot when he was very little and i said you know he doesn't need anything except you know
92
look look at him if he cries but you know don't pick him up and and this sort of stuff because i was gone only an hour at a stretch or an hour and a half
93
94
95
yeah
96
oh that's wonderful
97
98
99
and i was able to you know get his his schedule just uh cooperated and
100
101
102
right
103
that's wonderful yeah and and i guess um that uh because of your um your uh profession i mean i um i'm in corporate communications but i've done freelance writing in the past
104
105
106
yeah
107
uh-huh
108
109
110
so what we're hoping is that um i mean my husband thinks i can do it i've just never worked out of a domestic base you know i've always been in a corporate uh environment
111
112
113
um-hum
114
115
116
um but i'm hoping that possibly i can do something where i can go flextime or part-time or if they don't have that um
117
my boss i'm very lucky though again too my boss is very akin to family building so i think that's something that something that couples need in going into this
118
119
120
um-hum
121
right
122
123
124
um i don't know i do think there's good day care out there what part of the country are you in
125
126
127
i'm in Maryland but but i was out of the country when um my my son was little but but the thing is if you have this flextime and that you might be able to do something similar to what i did which is
128
129
130
you're in Maryland
131
right that's what i'm hoping
132
133
134
you know be there short times and then later on when he was you know i mean this we're talking about uh i went back to work and or taught some some classes like a week after he was born
135
136
137
um-hum
138
oh my goodness you were fortunate yeah
139
140
141
and so
142
yeah and so that's when i was saying you know don't don't pick him up and stuff but then later what i did was i brought a woman into the house
143
144
145
yeah
146
um-hum sure
147
148
149
and she was she was supposed to help me a little bit with cooking and doing the baby's laundry and this sort of stuff
150
151
152
uh-huh
153
154
155
and then i also came home and sort of was
156
was able to see from a distance what she was doing and you know in a sense she she carried him around a lot too much uh you know for for my taste it was constantly no i don't want him to explore anything he might
157
158
159
uh-huh
160
uh-huh
161
right
162
163
164
165
166
uh he might hurt himself
167
168
169
so do you think that i mean do you think that that was in a way though good objectivity good objectivity that now that's doesn't really that's not a correct English but um you know in a sense you see what i'm saying though from a mother's standpoint i mean in a way it it was quote unquote good objectivity objectivity
170
171
172
173
174
i think it worked out very well a very well because what he learned to do by the time he was
175
176
177
um-hum
178
179
180
two or so he would sit next to the desk where i was grading papers or writing lesson plans and he had asked for a paper and you know sort of scribble and then he realized that there were quiet times and there were active times
181
182
183
see
184
um-hum
185
yeah
186
right and then he learned he he also learned that um there were times that you had to be gone so you probably minimized well we're actually um we're getting ready i mean you're far enough away now i can tell you this just locally i make sure we're going to Romania in a few weeks
187
188
189
oh
190
191
192
and that's um just
193
194
195
did you say Romania or Armenia
196
197
198
Romania Romania
199
200
201
oh okay yeah yeah
202
203
204
as in like what 20/20 and um but we we're real excited because we've just developed a contact
205
206
207
oh good
208
209
210
through professional people and it's private and it's hospital it's we're just very excited um
211
212
213
oh great
214
215
216
and well
217
it it what's the word i'm looking for when you deal with issues like that um in terms of family building through adoption um and then you have people responding to you well if you go through that why would you put them in day care
218
219
220
oh that's silly
221
222
223
um issues are being raised prematurely in my mind but i guess they're not because
224
it's something i'll have to deal with sooner than later um and i what i've learned to do is just tune out everybody's opinion i feel that if the child's healthy um you know as long as we make it feel secure i'd love to do something like with what you did
225
226
227
um-hum
228
229
230
um i don't think i could be a dumper where i could take it from you know eight in the morning till nine at night or six at night and leave it there
231
232
233
right right
234
235
236
uh maybe after two or three or years old i don't know um
237
238
239
oh i in my opinion it's even then i mean uh kids need you
240
241
242
but
243
yeah i just
244
well they need a schedule i think i don't think the United States what country were you um in Europe when you were uh uh
245
246
247
no i was in the Middle East
248
249
250
um oh that's sort of well that's the same thing i mean i don't know how they are there but uh
251
in eastern Europe my stepfather's from England it just seems the United States does not provide for either child care or geriatrics or elder care as i call it
252
253
254
right right
255
256
257
um and we're just not set up for that um with the
258
259
260
i yeah
261
262
263
go ahead
264
265
266
no i was just going to say i guess uh my sensitivities are are much more with the
267
you know to be at home because actually i had my grandmother with me fro m the time she was from the time she was ninety two until she died at ninety seven
268
269
270
um-hum
271
see i think that's wonderful
272
273
274
and i mean that was recently after my son son was going off and i mean yes in a sense i went to work and she was at home alone some of the time but but still you know it was much better than being shipped
275
276
277
uh-huh
278
to a
279
280
281
to a day care center
282
283
284
right
285
286
287
you know which is much my feelings on kids and the elderly i think we're too we're too too much towards it's somebody else's problem you know i want to work shove them in in some school for twelve hours a day
288
289
290
we cast off right right that i'm that way yeah
291
right it's easier and i agree with that that's why i you you know what is amazing to me is now your son is already grown but you can probably empathize with this
292
293
294
yeah
295
296
297
it's amazing to me how forthcoming people are with their opinions and thoughts
298
299
300
right right
301
302
303
in terms of what to do um
304
and i just don't think there is a day a good day care system um my company i'm particularly fortunate that they have they're in tune with that
305
but i've been at companies where um you know the decision the the trend is or the definite mood is well we made conscious decisions not to have children
306
307
308
and that's sad
309
310
311
you know and in and a couple like us building through adoption there it's almost radical to some people
312
313
314
right
315
316
317
and what you just learn to do is tune everybody else out and um and i respect there are some women that i know that are divorced or on their own or
318
in single parenting and men that they you know they may have the need for child care like that
319
320
321
um-hum
322
323
324
but i agree with you that it's just i call it dumping i mean i
325
326
327
yeah no i i think that certainly there is a role uh for this type of help and and as long as one can can supervise it and and you know make it work
328
329
330
um-hum
331
332
333
into into one's own schedule without it seeming like dumping or or uh giving it you know the whole job to somebody else to take care of
334
335
336
um-hum
337
then yeah it's are it's in tandem then
338
339
340
and
341
yeah yeah
342
343
344
i just um and there are trade-offs too i think one of the things that is a problem is that um in terms of compensation to some of the child care providers
345
346
347
um-hum
348
349
350
um it's just
351
you know it's so low but yet the overall cost for somebody doing it on a daily or even a weekly basis it's prohibitive and some people that are not making more than twenty thousand a year
352
353
354
yeah
355
356
357
um
358
359
360
actually there seems to be an alternative in my neighborhood is there seem there are several uh uh mothers mothers who stay home
361
362
363
really
364
um-hum
365
366
367
and they take you know it's probably not completely legal uh i maybe it's legal up to one or two additional kids
368
369
370
sure
371
372
373
but and they they take care of another child and i i can actually name could name five or six people around my neighborhood that really do a good job on this
374
375
376
uh-huh and they yeah
377
378
379
and i mean that's another possibility and you know you might want to stay home one year and some other lady might want to stay home for a a few years and
380
381
382
i haven't thought about that yeah and actually my neighbor has an eighteen month old and
383
she's an at home part-time paralegal so i'm thinking hm and we get along fantastically so i'm thinking you know and that's the way you have to um how was i'm just real curious how was the Middle East in terms of that with children
384
385
386
yeah yeah
387
388
389
is that is child care or that type of idea completely foreign to them
390
391
392
no well actually there was a day care center um where my son did go for a year i think from when he was two to three
393
394
395
um-hum
396
397
398
but then he actually started kindergarten at age three
399
400
401
um-hum
402
403
404
and so and it you know it wasn't like pre kindergarten it was real kindergarten
405
406
407
oh really he must be smart yeah
408
409
410
yeah so he was he was ready to to go to school at that point
411
412
413
um-hum
414
415
416
but yeah they're they do have such facilities but for the most part uh the with the extended family
417
you know you can usually find somebody which is much like our neighbor you know to sharing responsibility and i'm and also there aren't that many women who who do who work
418
419
420
uh-huh
421
the professional yeah i was wondering about that um there i'm in Dallas and there was just a very big um series about Moslem women and
422
423
424
yeah
425
um-hum
426
427
428
there were enlightening things that broke some of my stereotypical thoughts i'm digressing here but uh i was just real curious when you said Middle East if you didn't mind me asking
429
430
431
yeah
432
no no and i didn't mean Israel so you you assumed right
433
434
435
oh no that's okay well even if you did that's okay actually i think
436
437
438
well no because at first thought uh when i said uh you know i said that not many people work i'm i'm thinking oh well she's going to you know because certainly in Israel the women do work
439
440
441
right right they fight they work
442
443
444
445