Getting Pregnant
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

Two third shift parents?

Straight to the point:

My husband and I are trying to decide if having children is right for us.  We both work third shift and don't desire to work any other shifts, nor do we want to not see each other.  I also don't want to have to quit my job; I love it, not to mention we can't afford it.  We are both getting more on board with the idea of having children, except we can't figure out how to make the schedule work...  Unless we have the baby in daycare for 16 hours a day, which obviously is not something we can or will do.  Any ideas how we can make this work?

Re: Two third shift parents?

  • MH1006MH1006 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited May 2014
    Sometimes having kids means making sacrifices and working shifts you'd rather not work. Kids are such a pain sometimes.

    Many people I know who work at night hire a trusted friend/college student/family member/etc to stay the night with their children. This works better with older children though, as when the kids are little you also need care during the day unless you and your hubby don't ever sleep. Don't know how possible it is in your situation, but one of you probably needs to suck it up for a few years and work a different shift until the kids are in school.

    I've known people to hire a live-in nanny (like a college student who goes to class in the evenings but is home during the day and at night) but I hear it's expensive. Good luck.
  • My sister and her DH work different shifts. She is a nurse at a hospital and he is a fire fighter. They plan to hire a nanny or find someone with a very flexible home daycare.
    "How long till my soul gets it right? Can any human being ever reach the highest light? Except for Galileo, god rest his soul, king of night vision, king of insight." ~ Indigo Girls Anniversary
    When you've been married this long, you need a ticker to remind you.

    Baby Boy M - 08/01/2013
  • tdmd09tdmd09 member
    Ninth Anniversary 2500 Comments 25 Love Its Name Dropper
    I know you said you don't want to not see each other, but maybe you could look into scheduling your days opposite of each other (especially if you work 12 hour shifts) so someone is always home (and awake)? My DH is a firefighter (24 hour shifts) and I'm a nurse, and I took a position where I could self-schedule my days so they don't conflict with DH's. It's annoying to feel like a single parent a lot of the time, but with our erratic schedules, daycare wasn't really an option, so this is what we did. Once DS is old enough to be in school we will likely change up my schedule and/or my job to accommodate our family better.
    BFP 9/22/10, missed m/c 11/1/10 at 9w3d, D&C 11/3/10, diagnosis: trophoblastic hyperplasia
    BFP 6/18/11, missed m/c 8/16/11 at 11w2d, D&C 8/17/11, diagnosis: baby girl with Trisomy 21
    BFP 5/29/12, healthy baby boy born 2/12/13 at 40w5d :)
    Lilypie First Birthday tickers
    Congrats to both my TTC buddies, Amberley18 and sb2006 on their beautiful babies!
  • I work 4-midnight Dh works 4am-3pm. We don't see each other much, but the babe is always with one of us or a family member for about an hour. We make it work. I agree with MH, you need to be flexible and change it up of you want to have kids.
  • MH1006MH1006 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited May 2014
    nfp147 said:

    Hold on to your hats kids; I'm agreeing with @MH1006. ;) 


    Kids = sacrifice.  

    If you aren't willing to change your shifts, perhaps you aren't ready.
    Thanks for contributing! Oh wait, you contributed nothing to this conversation. Thanks for paraphrasing, I guess.

  • nfp147nfp147 member
    Eighth Anniversary 5000 Comments 500 Love Its First Answer
    MH1006 said:
    Hold on to your hats kids; I'm agreeing with @MH1006. ;) 

    Kids = sacrifice.  

    If you aren't willing to change your shifts, perhaps you aren't ready.
    Thanks for contributing! Oh wait, you contributed nothing to this conversation. Thanks for paraphrasing, I guess.
    Hey!  Thanks for showing up.  And, thanks for understanding. 
    Anniversary image

    Created by MyFitnessPal - Free Calorie Counter

    TTC Since January 2011 - We have bad sperm 
    February 2013: IUI #1 = BFN 
    October 2013: We made the decision to stop TTC and live without children.

    Nestie Besties with Xan921 
  • MH1006MH1006 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    OMG lol!! "Thanks for understanding" isn't overused at all!! Still so hi - larious!! Rofl! Lmao! Lololol! You are just great!
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards