Money Matters
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My boyfriend and I are about to go through some really big financial changes in February. He was offered a really big opportunity to work on an app for Google that he patented. He's currently a sophmore in college but is 26. I'm 24 and have my bachelor's in nursing. I have been supporting our family financially this past semester and he was completely consumed with working on this project. It was extremely hard on our relationship. Now he will be working pretty much full time on this project but making a 6 figure salary. He still has to go to school full time however because part of the contract included the university backing him. We have a wonderful almost three year old, which leaves me pretty much all the family duties. Now that we will have some extra money I'm wondering what types of things people can hire for to make life a little easier. If anyone could shot me some ideas on how to make day to day life easier using our extra money that would be awesome! I just know I can't handle another semester like this past one and I don't think our relationship could survive it either.
Re: Financial Changes
The things I can think of are:
1) Nanny. Not having to take your child to a care center will save you time shuttling your child back and forth, packing lunches, etc. It can also help with sick days since nannies will usually watch your child even if he/she is too sick for a center.
2) House cleaners. This can save several hours a week depending on the size of your house and how much you currently clean.
3) Eating out/Ordering in. This can save time on cooking and cleaning, though it can also lessen the quality of your diet depending on they type of food and how often its eaten.
Excuse me if you've already done this, but I'd also recommend coming up with a plan now for how to save some of the extra money for yourselves and your LO. In my life, I've found it easy to blow even large sums without a plan going in.
Good luck with the new changes!
While I think all the advise about being smart about how you adjust your spending in response to your increased income is right on, I also think it is totally appropriate for you to spend some of that money on things that will make your life easier. The reality is that you are functioning like a single mother who also works a full time job. While plenty people make that work without outsourcing some household tasks, you are not in a position where you can't afford that help, and having it will make your life and your relationship with both your child and your husband better. That is certainly worth something. Now that we have kids, we have been fine shifting some of our "fun" money away from things like travel (that aren't actually isn't all that fun with kids) to things that make our day to day lives easier.
I can't imagine that a mother's helper or a one night a week sitter is going to meet your needs for full-time child care, so the real comparison here should be the cost of full time day care versus a full time nanny. In our area, a nanny is pretty comparably priced to day care for 2 kids, so it would probably be a big jump in those expenses for you. Whether that would be worth it for you or not is the question you will have to answer, and like other have said should take into account your long term financial goals like retirement savings.
For me personally, the best outsourcing has been having someone clean the house every other week. I don't enjoy cleaning and I find it difficult to get done when I'm home with the kids. DH tries but is honestly terrible at cleaning. I still spend time every day cleaning the kitchen and picking up stuff around the house, but I have at least 3 extra hours every week. The house is not as clean as when I do it myself, but I have had to adjust my standards to fit with the reality of our busy lives.
2)plan on a nanny for finals/big exam weeks
3)laundry service (there is nothing like waking up every day and just having clothes ready to throw on and meet the madness of a crazy schedule)
Also, discuss your needs, and plan to budget to meet these support needs without blowing through the new income. Congrats, and good luck!