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by Tracy S.

I am not a religious person.  And I didn’t think I was that spiritual either. 

I’m just a mom – insert horrific stare here– trying to keep my head above water and balance my kids, marriage, and empty checkbook.  Today was a particularly trying day.  I realized that, for the first time, we may not be able to pay our mortgage on time.  This terrified me.  And, me being the mother of the year that I am, tried everything in my power to keep my dread, my fear, and my anxieties away from my kids.  Keyword being tried.

While attempting to whip up a Betty Crocker worthy dinner, I allowed my sons, Preston and Carter, aged 2 and 3 and a half, to play with play doh and watch Tom & Jerry in the living room.  Usually this is a highly supervised activity and it did start out to be.  Carter was watching Tom & Jerry quietly, besides the giggles, and I had made Preston a little brown ball that he was rolling around on the mat we lay out when we use the play doh.  The rule is simple.  Keep the playdoh on the mat…NOWHERE ELSE.  Yeah, I see you smirking, you THINK you know where this is heading.   Well you’re right.  Somewhat.

So I left the boys, and went into the kitchen.  Not five minutes later, I hear the boys dragging a box of cars into the living room to play with.  Typically this wouldn’t bother me, as the parade of playroom toys making their way to the living room and back are a daily ritual that I look forward to like a root canal.  But it was then that I realized the play doh was still out and when we are DONE with play doh it is put away until the dreaded next time it is dragged out (I still have embedded chunks in our rug that is beneath the mat I mentioned. Go figure).

Here is where I forget to mention that they are wrestling with the box and, well, being kids, so I tell them in my Suzy Homemaker tone “We are going to put the play doh away before playing with the cars.”  I then discover, as we are putting away the jars, the brown jar is half full.  I ask nicely “Preston, where is the brown ball of play doh?” He answers me in true two year old fashion by handing me a blue monster truck.  I am now paranoid and my eyes are scanning the room feverishly, looking for the brown ball of play doh.  I announce “We are not watching Tom & Jerry until the brown ball of play doh is found!!” And I pause the TV.

And I look.  And I look.  And I do not see it. 

What I see is red. 

And you are probably reading this saying, “This woman is about to go postal over a brown ball of play doh…seriously??”  However, today is not a typical day.  Today is the day that all my fears and stresses seem to be becoming reality and internally I am falling apart because, well, let’s face it, you want to be able to provide for your kids and it seems like we are having a hard time doing just that.

So I am on a rampage now.  Freaking out…screaming, “Where is the brown ball of play doh?!?” Like a blubbering mental patient.  The kids are half ass looking and I am thinking “Great.  Now I have to explain this to my husband when he gets home, right after I drop the “we are broke” bomb.  Good times. 

So I sit. 

On my kitchen floor.

Knees drawn to my chest. 

Crying.

And I do what I always do when faced with these breakdown situations.  I ask for help.  Not from God. But from my dad.  Even after he passed, he is the one I look to for help in times like these. 

And the house is dead silent because the TV is paused. And I hear Preston in the living room doing anything but looking for the brown ball of play doh.  I put my head down and cry more, thankful my kids are too busy to notice. 

When I look up, my Carter has quietly walked into the kitchen and he looks at my bloodshot mother of the year eyes and he drops the brown ball of play doh in the palm of my hand. “It was on the chugga chugga choo choo train table” – a place I looked several times.

We embrace.

Like mother and son.

Like father and daughter.

Thanks dad.

Tracy S. is a stay at home, wife and mother to two boys, Carter and Preston.  She lives in New Jersey and enjoys writing, reading, tweeting, and cooking.  She has her own blog she barely touches.  She is a Special Education teacher looking to enter back into the workforce…just as soon as someone lets her back in. 

by Sarah Carmichael

I have been conflicted about deciding to be a working mother or a stay at home mother since before I had my son.   Even though I entertained the idea of working outside the home, I always knew what I wanted to do.  I wanted to spend my days with my kids, teach them, feed them, and watch them grow.

When my son was 10 months old, my maternity leave ended and I went back to work.  Six months later, my contract wasn’t renewed due to lack of funding.  I was beyond relieved.  At that point, I really didn’t think I would go back into the workforce.  I remember thinking that I would never have to do another job interview.  Naive, I suppose.

I didn’t expect to be sitting here today with multiple tabs open in my browser advertising an assortment of job opportunities, each simultaneously holding promise and dread.  It has become painfully obvious that staying at home is longer an option for me, financially.  It is no longer a choice.  And so begins the soul-sapping process of searching for income.

Nothing seems to offer enough salary.  At least, not enough to cover full-time care for my son.  How do families do this?  Child care is expensive!  I went to an interview for one job and after doing the math, realized that an entire paycheck would go to child care.  A full 2 weeks of work to pay for someone else to care for my son.  As much as we need the second paycheck, I can’t get over that I would be working in order to be able to pay someone else to do what I want to do – be with my son and spend the little time with him that he has before he starts school.  It just doesn’t sit right with me.  It doesn’t make sense.

So, here I sit fully buried by this conundrum that so many parents face.  How do I provide for my son while also giving him what he and I need most?  Time. 

I know that I am not the only person capable of caring for my son.  I don’t deny that he could benefit from more exposure to children his own age.  Admittedly, he could benefit a lot from that.  I actually think he needs that.  He is ready for that.  But, not full-time.

What I need is a part-time job that pays enough to cover part-time care and then some.  Do those kinds of jobs even exist?  I have my doubts.

In the meantime, here I sit scouring the internet for the perfect job.  The job I don’t want, but the job I need.

Sarah unexpectedly became a stay at home mom to her 2 year old son last year and had couldn’t be happier. She currently faces re-entering a world that she had hoped to leave behind. She blogs at sarahcasm.ca