Balancing Family and Daycare

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  • CraftyMom
    Daycare.com Member
    • Jan 2014
    • 2285

    Balancing Family and Daycare

    How does everyone balance family and daycare? I have a hard time with it. I spend all day taking care of 5 or 6 children including my 2 year old. When my two oldest kids come home from school I have 7 or 8. It don't have to tell anyone here how hectic it can get! By the time the last child leaves I am exhausted a frazzled to say the least, and I still have my 3 kids to care for and feed and get into bed. I feel like I have the job that never ends! At the end of the work day I don't leave my job I live in it! I have very little patience for my own kids because I'm just done by then. Its not fair to them and I don't know how to change that
  • TwinKristi
    Family Childcare Provider
    • Aug 2013
    • 2390

    #2
    I'm working on this as well. The last thing I want to do when my DCKs leave is cook and clean let alone do something else or fun! And we have baseball season approaching!

    Comment

    • cara041083
      Daycare.com Member
      • Aug 2013
      • 567

      #3
      I am dealing with this as well. I feel like I am missing out more now then I did when I worked, but my biggest issue is trying to handle getting my kids to the doc, and dentist, and school parties without my husband always having to miss work or me having to close for the day and making parents mad.

      Comment

      • Annalee
        Daycare.com Member
        • Jul 2012
        • 5864

        #4
        Originally posted by Lauram16
        How does everyone balance family and daycare? I have a hard time with it. I spend all day taking care of 5 or 6 children including my 2 year old. When my two oldest kids come home from school I have 7 or 8. It don't have to tell anyone here how hectic it can get! By the time the last child leaves I am exhausted a frazzled to say the least, and I still have my 3 kids to care for and feed and get into bed. I feel like I have the job that never ends! At the end of the work day I don't leave my job I live in it! I have very little patience for my own kids because I'm just done by then. Its not fair to them and I don't know how to change that
        :hug: It is hard to work/live in the same place because there is no end. Plus I felt like I failed in the home and at daycare. I met a wonderful mentor several years ago that has REALLY helped me. Sometimes just from listening to me, but sometimes by telling me what I needed to do to make it better....like setting up my contract/policy to alleviate extra stresses (like closing earlier, setting time-constraints for clients, holidays, vacations), to restructure my room to fit home needs as well, to gain control of my business, etc. It wasn't easy at the time, and is much easier to tell someone than to do it. I now have a large room built onto the house which is wonderful, but I do feel your pain because daycare was for many years in the living room. I am an organizational person, but it was very difficult in the living room. Sit down, and write the pros and cons of your job. If the pros outweigh the cons, the sit down and decide what YOU can do/control to make it better for you and your family. Seek out support from this forum and possibly other providers in your area. I text, call, email every day with my mentor. Best of luck! :hug:

        Comment

        • Evansmom
          Advanced Daycare.com Member
          • Mar 2011
          • 722

          #5
          I don't know either. I could never balance everything. I just always had way too many balls in the air and I'd juggle as fast as I could. Being so crazy busy all the time is what eventually burned me out I believe. I shut down in August and only watch one friend's boy Tu/Th and my granddaughter 3 days per week plus my 6 year old. And that's still a lot for a burned out momma.

          All I ever could come up with was trying to pay someone to come clean the house and then that would have taken one thing off my list. That would be such a luxury! That still wouldn't fully balance things, but it could be a good start. I ran a small school though, I never had the money to hire anyone to clean.

          Comment

          • CraftyMom
            Daycare.com Member
            • Jan 2014
            • 2285

            #6
            Thank you everyone. It is so hard! I would love more than anything to set up daycare in our basement since it is such a great space! However we need to install an exit first which will be very costly. I think that getting daycare out of our living space would greatly help, then at the end of the day I will actually "leave" work. The pros definitely out weigh the cons. I just have to figure out how to make it work. I need to set aside time specifically for my kids, not always easy with the few hours left to the day. Also I need to be sure parents pick up on time and then leave I currently have a mom with two children in my care and she lingers, cuddling and asking how their day was etc. This goes on for 15 minutes while I'm making hints like getting coats on and saying see you tomorrow to the kids. I realize parents miss their kids but at the end of the day I'm ready to be done and it cuts into my time. I feel bad, but she can cuddle them and ask about their day at home. I'm hoping this forum will if nothing else ease my mind a bit, knowing I'm not the only one!

            Comment

            • Blackcat31
              • Oct 2010
              • 36124

              #7
              One of the best pieces of advice I ever got when I first ventured into this profession was to make CLEAR boundaries as to what MY job duties were and what the PARENT'S job duties were and then don't let them blur.

              Comment

              • KIDZRMYBIZ
                Daycare.com Member
                • Jun 2013
                • 672

                #8
                Originally posted by Lauram16
                Thank you everyone. It is so hard! I would love more than anything to set up daycare in our basement since it is such a great space! However we need to install an exit first which will be very costly. I think that getting daycare out of our living space would greatly help, then at the end of the day I will actually "leave" work. The pros definitely out weigh the cons. I just have to figure out how to make it work. I need to set aside time specifically for my kids, not always easy with the few hours left to the day. Also I need to be sure parents pick up on time and then leave I currently have a mom with two children in my care and she lingers, cuddling and asking how their day was etc. This goes on for 15 minutes while I'm making hints like getting coats on and saying see you tomorrow to the kids. I realize parents miss their kids but at the end of the day I'm ready to be done and it cuts into my time. I feel bad, but she can cuddle them and ask about their day at home. I'm hoping this forum will if nothing else ease my mind a bit, knowing I'm not the only one!
                We live in a small-ish house, and I had the same feelings as you, as my playroom is what would be the living room on the main level, right in the middle of our house. There was no escaping it...E V E R!!! Our basement is not walk-out, so it would have cost a small fortune to get it daycare-ready. So instead, we used that money to finish it into a really nice living space for our family. I also re-did my bedroom with new paint and paper, cleared out all clutter, and hung a nice big tv, so that's also a space I like to unwind in.

                I really am a home-body, so I do love to be at home. Before I had some other nice spaces to go to, though, it seemed like I was constantly doing something for the daycare. Out of sight really can be out of mind!

                It seems we all experience the same problems, like late pick-ups and the l..i..n..g..e..r..i..n..g parent. This forum is absolutely fantastic for ideas on how to deal with every problem that ever arises. Especially check out BlackCat and NannyD on their thoughts. Those two are so inspirational, and on the mark every time!

                Comment

                • rebekki78
                  Daycare.com Member
                  • Sep 2013
                  • 137

                  #9
                  Originally posted by cara041083
                  I am dealing with this as well. I feel like I am missing out more now then I did when I worked, but my biggest issue is trying to handle getting my kids to the doc, and dentist, and school parties without my husband always having to miss work or me having to close for the day and making parents mad.
                  This is exactly how I have felt. Some days are SO TOUGH!!! Recently, I decided I needed to cut down the number of kids that I am caring for. I am not running at licensed capacity. After all, I quit my job to do this in my home to benefit my family and spend time with my children. (Also because I really think God gave me a gift to work well with children.) The other day I looked around my living room and both of my children were in their bedrooms. When I went in to talk to them, my daughter said "it was too much chaos for her to handle". My son is 14 and has Asperger's so many times he will just cry because "mom, they're all talking at the same time". I felt bad for the families I had to let go but in the end my own children come first. This is their home. Their future rides on now and it rides on me. So for me, the cut back was the answer. The loss of income will hurt, but I’m not in it for the money. I am in it to impact each childs life in a positive manner on a daily basis. Although it is a daily struggle to “take up my cross ” and be who I was called to be, I think I can do it better when I have a lighter stress level. I also hired an assistant to come over when my kids or I have appointments. This can be a struggle in itself with scheduling conflicts and things, but so far it has also helped lighten my load.

                  I am blessed that I have a bi-level houses and I can use my basement for the “daycare space”. It helps a lot. It is a 20’ by 40’ space that my kids used to use as their play place. Now that they are all older they no longer need a play place.

                  Comment

                  • BrooklynM
                    Provider
                    • Sep 2013
                    • 518

                    #10
                    I know this sounds crazy, but I balance things out with my ex-husband and his wife. They have 2 kids together and he and I have 2 kids together. I watch their 2 babies full time and we all help each other out. For example, my sons step mom is taking him to the doctor right now, she was able to take off a couple of hours to take him.

                    I'm so thankful for what we have. My ex-husband is not a bad guy and we had a cordial divorce with 50/50 custody and we live about a mile and a half apart. He chose an amazing woman as his new wife and she has an amazing family that also helps out.

                    My life isn't perfect, but I feel blessed everyday by how much support I have and how much love my kids get. I'm not saying that you should get divorced, but it takes a village so feel free to ask for help from your kids friends' parents, etc.

                    Comment

                    • melilley
                      Daycare.com Member
                      • Oct 2012
                      • 5155

                      #11
                      Originally posted by rebekki78
                      This is exactly how I have felt. Some days are SO TOUGH!!! Recently, I decided I needed to cut down the number of kids that I am caring for. I am not running at licensed capacity. After all, I quit my job to do this in my home to benefit my family and spend time with my children.
                      Same here. Before I opened, I made up my mind that I would have 2-3 part time kids and 3 full time and that's it. I have a 1.5 yo ds who is here too, so that adds one more "full" time and an 11yo dd who is here when there is no school, so to stay sane, I did it that way. Two days a week, I am (well will be starting Mon.) at capacity, but the other 3 days I'm not, and that really helps!

                      Comment

                      • melilley
                        Daycare.com Member
                        • Oct 2012
                        • 5155

                        #12
                        Honestly, it is hard to balance work and family. During the week I don't go anywhere and if I do, it's a rare occasion! I have 4-6 kids here everyday and also my 1.5 yo ds and 11 yo dd(when there's no school and after school) so I know how you feel. The dc kids go home, then it's straight to cleaning, cooking, helping with homework, spending time with my own kids (if there's time before bed time), etc... It's hard. But I do try to have my dh help out and when he is here to do so, it's a huge help! Besides grocery shopping, I spend the weekends with my family. I try to remember that I opened my dc to stay home and allow my kids to be home too. It helps a little.

                        Comment

                        • melilley
                          Daycare.com Member
                          • Oct 2012
                          • 5155

                          #13
                          Originally posted by BrooklynM
                          I know this sounds crazy, but I balance things out with my ex-husband and his wife. They have 2 kids together and he and I have 2 kids together. I watch their 2 babies full time and we all help each other out. For example, my sons step mom is taking him to the doctor right now, she was able to take off a couple of hours to take him.

                          I'm so thankful for what we have. My ex-husband is not a bad guy and we had a cordial divorce with 50/50 custody and we live about a mile and a half apart. He chose an amazing woman as his new wife and she has an amazing family that also helps out.

                          My life isn't perfect, but I feel blessed everyday by how much support I have and how much love my kids get. I'm not saying that you should get divorced, but it takes a village so feel free to ask for help from your kids friends' parents, etc.

                          That is so great! I really like that you and your ex and your significant other(s) can work so well together! That's rare.

                          Comment

                          • AmyLeigh
                            Daycare.com Member
                            • Oct 2011
                            • 868

                            #14
                            That's why I've chosen to keep my enrollment small. I have 3 children of my own, and I found that the minute I have more than 3 fulltime dck's here, I'm totally overwhelmed. Thankfully I can make that choice, between dh's income and our simple lifestyle. I fully understand that not everyone can make that work.

                            Comment

                            • CraftyMom
                              Daycare.com Member
                              • Jan 2014
                              • 2285

                              #15
                              I too decided to take 5 kids instead of 6, part of my "de-stressing plan". It definitely helps! That one extra kid is sometimes enough to send me over the edge some days, regardless of who it is! Then when my kids get home from school the stress level intensifies. One less kid eases some of this
                              Last edited by CraftyMom; 01-31-2014, 12:09 PM. Reason: mistake

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