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I am
typing on the
computer, trying to keep up with the flood of emails and programs that
require
my attention, when my 19 month old comes to me for the fourth time this
morning
calling ‘potty!’ I rush upstairs to the bathroom when I hear the
doorbell…my
friends children have arrived as usual, since I care for them four days
a week
while their mother takes off for an adult world I hardly recognize. It
is 7:20
am.
Breakfast follows, I set them up and dash to the computer again to
finish what
I started, but then the four year olds are fighting and the one year
old has
dumped her applesauce on the carpet. I determine that office
environments were
created for a reason. It’s 7:35 am.
Since I am paid to care for these children, I cannot devote much time
to my
other business during the days they are in my home. But that does not
stop me
from feeding my own children peanut buttered bread for breakfast and
sitting
them in front of the TV from 6:00am
until 12:00 on my ‘day off’.
As you can see, or know from experience, working from home in any
capacity is a
change to your family’s life no matter what the business. But as much
as I
would love to dote on my own children and spend hours baking and
coloring and
folding laundry (RIGHT!), I, like many mothers, have been faced with
the choice
of returning to the typical ‘working world’ and passing my children
into
someone else’s care, or juggling to bring in an income while caring for
them
myself.
Our strategy has been for me to develop an online business while
maintaining an
income we can survive on by babysitting. The babysitting is temporary,
and not
my first choice, but I do love the children I care for, and now that
we’ve all
adjusted I am going to miss them terribly when we move on.
However, I knew the babysitting was not the long term solution, and I
ache for
the independence I read about with internet based business. So I plug
away
early morning, nap times and evenings after the children are in bed.
This is
how we move towards a simpler life. Eventually, my kids and my husband
will
have me pretty much to themselves. I know that working will always
interfere
with living, but this is a solution that I can accept.
My main learning, or coping strategy, is to do things in blocks.
Writing an
article is one block. Reading and responding to emails is another. Feeding
the
children, taking them for a walk, or planning an afternoon out (which
is what I
do with mine every day off), all combine to make this work-from-home
mother’s
work day move forward.
Should my children be classified as part of my work? No, absolutely I
do not
view it that way. This is the fabulousness of working from home.
Stressful as
it may be at times, I am choosing a life that allows me to step out of
my
office (so to speak) and cuddle on the couch with four little darlings
(well,
some of the time!). I can shake off the frustration of figuring out
HTML code
by having coffee with my neighbor. This is a life worth choosing.
So to all you work-from-home mothers (and fathers too), perhaps balance
isn’t
always possible, but keeping priorities is. You can decide that the
children
must quietly watch a video while you make a phone call or finish your
project,
and know that you are not putting them in second place. Why? Because
you are
there. And as long as you know when to put the office ‘away’ and be
there for
your children, you are giving them a life that, while busy and not
always easy,
it is a life that you are a bigger part of.
To all of you who take on the important task of raising your children,
while
making a living, my congratulations and encouragement!
Shannon
Emmanuel
raises her young daughters while running two online businesses. Find
information on home businesses at http://www.Affiliate-Start.com. And home
decor http://www.SimpleDetailsDecor.com
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