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21

How I Used 30 Minutes to Transition from Work to Home And How It Helped Me Be a Better Daddy

Posted by Jeff on January 21, 2009    778 views    Comments (View Comments)

How many of you are from families where both parents work?

How about just one parent that works?

Well in our family, both Mommy and I work, and we work hard during our 9 hour day away from the kids — they both go to school/daycare. Mommy has a little longer of a commute (30 mins from work to daycare) and therefore a little more “transition time” from work life to home life. Me on the other hand work minutes from our kid’s daycare — and I used to be the primary parent for evening pick up — giving me like 3 minutes to destress from a busy day at work to both kids so excited to see me. Sure it’s awesome to have them excited to see me…but I was always experiencing both of them trying to talk over one another, tell me about their day, and just trying to fight for my attention.

My attention? How could I pay attention to them with only 3 minutes of downtime from work? I try and I try and I never seem to be able to do that.

Well lately my wife, the saint that she is, has been picking up the kids and I’ve been heading home directly from work. I get home around 5:30pm and take care of the kitchen. Some nights it’s emptying the dishwasher, others it’s just cleaning up the bomb that went off from the morning!! Shit everywhere! And sometimes I might just do nothing — just to relax. I need to relax! I’m a high stress individual , not a good mix for a 4 and 2 year old right now. (I’ve written about that before…and probably write more on that subject again!)

Finding the time to relax and enjoy playtime

So…as I was typing. I’ve been heading home before the rest of the family. Take tonight for example. I left work at 5:10pm and stopped off at ACME (food store) to grab a few things for a salad (it was eat lite night) and return a RedBox movie rental (My Best Friend’s Girlfriend – or something like that). So by the time I got home it was 5:40pm. Not too bad — I had 30 minutes of transitioning from work to home (the drive is usually 15 minutes). I felt good when I got home!

What Worked

Having dinner almost ready when the rest of the family arrived home made all of us more relaxed. No more last minute running around the kitchen like a one man chef at a busy restaurant. No…it was rather peaceful. The whole night was peaceful.

I had the kid’s dinners ready, food on plate, milk in cups, napkins, forks and spoons for them. Then i prepped a simple salad of baby spinach, feta and sunflower seeds for my wife and I. Poured her a glass of Shiraz and I enjoyed 2 Heinekin Lights. (It was eat lite night).

I did not yell tonight! That might be the first night in like months I didn’t have to raise my voice! It was a great feeling. And I could tell that my son really liked that. He would say, “I Love you Daddy!”

So after dinner he and I went into his playroom and created a pretty kick-butt GEOTRAX train layout. He was so excited that I went in and ASKED him to play trains with me. I usually try to clean up and do house stuff so my wife and I don’t have to do that once the kids are asleep. We do need our own time as well. But she packed lunches and cleaned up while the kids and I played.

The Best Night Ever

Well at least tonight ranks up there in Top 5 nights for me. There was absolutely NO WHINING! That’s right. No Whining at our house! Or none that I remember, so that’s good. Took my son up to bed and read him 3 books. He kept saying he had fun with the trains and than he loved me. That sure makes me feel good and I do feel good about it! I made his night!! and he made mine!

Now I just have to remember to stay calm and continue this!

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Comments from Other Parents...

  • It wears on me and I love it when the wife picks them up in the evening. She did last night and I was able to get home...start some laundry...start dinner etc. I felt great until my wife got home and she had a rough time picking up the girls. Then I felt bad and I probably should have picked them up. It was the first time she picked them up in a while and it backfired...
  • Great post and I love your site. I am a single Dad who writes about my struggles of keeping it all together. I will be back again!
  • thanks man!! I'm gonna stop by your site. I can use other Dad's input from
    time to time to learn what might work best in certain situations.
  • Totally understand the relationship between commute, decompression and seeing the kids. I have about an hour and a half to decompress- better yet 50 minutes of that is spent on the train with all sorts of unsavory characters- talk about making your family look desirable. By the time I get home I'm frigggin overjoyed to be with them even if they whine, trash the house and bite the cat on occassion.
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  • Wow, that's awesome that you were able to find something that worked for you and the fam. I also work, but I have the benefit of working from home. Still, it gets difficult at times juggling the demands of a very active and lively 5-year-old son, dropping him off and picking him up at school, making dinner (or buying take-out), running errands, going to school for two classes, occasionally taking the hubby to work because we only have one car, and finding some "me" time to read a book or indulge in a video game.

    The no-yelling part is the best :) I can't help it sometimes, but when I yell less or don't yell at all, it seems everything seems to go smoother.

    Kudos to you!
  • yes, if I can not raise my voice everything falls into place. I'm trying to
    get better and ignoring the not so good behaviors. My kids really are
    good...i think I just want them to never do anything wrong. But that isn't
    any fun for them!
  • daddybrain
    My commute is 45 minutes, in the dark during the winter months. Coupled with snow, ice and 18-wheelers that don't seem to slow down during a blizzard.

    Needless to say, it is not a time I find relaxing. I can not decompress. Even on a good, clear night the drive takes a lot out of me.

    I look forward to getting home to the boys and my lovely wife all day. And when I get there, I feel like all the life a has been sucked out of me. My wife needs a break (understandably), and the boys want to do everything together. Except that Max wants to do one thing, and Joss wants to do another.

    I do my best to enjoy them, but my exhaustion is so overwhelming.

    Another excellent post, man.

    Peace,

    babbo
    www.daddybrain.wordpress.com
  • Babbo,
    thanks for the great comment! appreciate your feedback and views!
  • I tell ya - our kids feed off of us more than we realize. I know that when I'm happy it seems like the whole house is happy. I know exactly how you feel about had kid duty @ the end of the day. I work less than 10 minutes away from they day care and I have morning AND afternoon/evening duty every single day!

    It wears on me and I love it when the wife picks them up in the evening. She did last night and I was able to get home...start some laundry...start dinner etc. I felt great until my wife got home and she had a rough time picking up the girls. Then I felt bad and I probably should have picked them up. It was the first time she picked them up in a while and it backfired...
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