A father’s time is more valuable than gold

Time flies

Making time work for me is a major challenge

I’ve been spending a lot of my commuting time lately thinking about the amount of time I spend with my kids, and how best to balance that against my requirement to provide for them, through making a success of my career and my personal self.

I should start by saying that I’m an ambitious person – I don’t want to simply do a job for 8 hours a day and for that to be the end of it.  I have nothing against people for whom that situation works – truth be told I envy it a little for its simplicity – but for me, I need more.  I need a career, with continuing opportunities to learn, grow and do and be more.  I need to feel as though I have a purpose and some control over how what that purpose might be.  The issue here, is how far I go with this drive, and still maintain the involved and close relationships I want with my children.

I love my current job, I really do.  After a couple of years of a job I knew had a shelf life and limits on how far I could go within that organisation (but still offered some valuable experience, it wasn’t all bad), I was fortunate enough to be approached about a new role with a bigger and more successful organisation within the same field.  It was the perfect opportunity for me and I was excited to take it on.

What it has meant though, is that I have spent a lot more time focussed on work, and indeed at work.  A by-product of being someone who wants to be successful is that you don’t simply clock-on, work and clock-off.  My hours now are longer and my time spent at home has reduced.  Where I once was leaving the house at 8am and returning about 5.45pm, I now leave about 7.15am and get back about 6.30pm – 7pm.  I often then have anywhere from 1 – 3 hours work which I do after dinner, and can thankfully do by remote connection to the office.  I choose to do that work that way so I can be home to have a bit of a muck-around with Leo and tuck him into bed.  Gus is too young yet to have a regular routine, so I see him every night when he wakes for a feed and we have a cuddle on the couch most evenings also.

On top of working longer and harder – in a job I love and with a company I can see a strong future and opportunities with – I’m also trying to do a couple of uni subjects each semester, including this one.  I have 6 units to go before I finally finish the qualification I started 9 years ago, and have been doing part-time by correspondence for the last 5.  To do this effectively, I’ve been trying to spend one evening a week in the library after work, but what it means is that I don’t get to see my boys that night, and potentially not see them awake for 36 hours.  I don’t like that, and often I choose being at home over studying, to the detriment of my study success.

It’s fair to say that I am battling a little with what kind of father I can be – one who is home a lot more but enjoys work less, or one who enjoys his work and is successful, but spends less time at home than he’d like.  In the tradition of those who do try and eat the cake they have, I am going to try and chart a middle road – being home most nights, but working hard and studying hard in the time I am away from home.  It sounds easy, but it isn’t, and I haven’t yet made it work.

I need to get the career vs. home life balance working a bit better before the boys are at an age where they acknowledge and remember absence more than they do now.  It’s going to be tough, but I am determined to make it work.


4 Comments Post a Comment
  1. Andrew Pelt says:

    hi.. just identified your Blog on google and your website is simply great.may I share some of the article found in this web site to my friends? anyhow, thanks for the awesome website..

    • Daddy says:

      Hi Andrew,

      Thanks for the feedback! Each of these posts is a personal recollection, so if you do want to reproduce any of them, we can discuss the best way to do that. Drop me an email and we’ll sort something out.

      Cheers.

  2. Marco says:

    I’m very much in the same boat myself. We have a two and a half year old boy and a second baby due literally any day now. At the same time, my workload looks like increasing very soon – but on the other hand, my office will shortly relocate which will actually put it closer to home in terms of distance (but with no real benefit in terms of travel time).

    Like you, I am out the door at 7:15 or so most mornings, and get home at 6pm if I’m lucky, more commonly 6:30. And again, like you, on most nights I have other work that I do after bath and bedtime.

    From where I sit, the best solution I’ve been able to come up with is to actually drive to work after the move. Not particularly planet-friendly and completely at odds with my public transport philosophy…but it will buy me another hour a day at home.

    • Daddy says:

      Welcome Marco!

      Fingers crossed that all goes well for you and N for the arrival of #2… keep me posted.

      Your point about driving is a good one, and I used to drive to work when I worked on the same side of the city that I live and it saved me an hour a day. Now it’s much of a muchness, and considerably cheaper on the train so I take that.

      As the years go by I’ll likely return to driving so I have a bit more flexibility.

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