Your Worry-Free Guide for Returning to Work

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            Whether you’ve been out of the workforce for months or years, making the transition back after staying home with your children can cause a mixture of excitement and anxiety. Read on to enjoy a smoother adjustment for your family.

            Celebrate the change. How a child reacts and adjusts to changes in home life can vary by personality and age. Talk to your kids about your decision to return to the workforce by explaining how the transition will benefit the entire family.

            Life and leadership coach Julie Edge, Ph.D., Inside Edge Coaching, Prairie Village, helps guide parents back into the workforce and says we often underestimate what our youngsters can understand.

            “It’s really about making it relevant for kids so that they can put it into context. Have them have a role in Mom or Dad going back to work: ‘We’re all going to chip in more’ or ‘We’re all going to need to help out in certain ways so that Mom can have this time to contribute to the family differently.’ They can be a cheerleader for Mom or Dad and help celebrate the change,” Edge says

            Manage your own fears. When you think about the prospect of going back to work, try not to get carried away imagining all the things that could go wrong during the transition. Edge says we often blow fears out of proportion, and she suggests saying your fears out loud. Often, what seems like a big deal in our heads sounds ridiculous to our ears.

            “Stay the course and let things unfold instead of trying to over-manage everything,” Edge says. “My clients are always surprised at how well it goes and that their fears really don’t come true.”

            Expect multiple conversations. Talking through your return to work with your kids probably won’t be a one-time conversation. Anticipate questions and concerns throughout the transition.

            “What you don’t want to do is promise that everything is going to be the same because it’s not going to be, and kids are smart,” Edge says. “Reassure them and make sure quality time with your kids—eye to eye—doesn’t feel like it’s being taken away.”

            Quality time. Although you may spend a fewer number of hours overall with your kids once you start working, you don’t have to sacrifice quality time. Try to eat meals together and periodically schedule family activities.

            Leigh Carr, a registered nurse, was a stay-at-home mom for four years. She returned to work when she and her husband, Dustin, decided to start Hari Om Hemp, an online shop based in Kansas City that sells a full spectrum of CBD bath and body products.

            “My oldest son, Nolan, who was 4 at the time, had more anxiety than his younger sister, who was 2. I made sure during the transition—and to this day—to make individual one-on-one time with each of my children so that they know in their mind and heart that I am still Mom before all else,” Carr says.

            Plan ahead. Take time on the weekend to scope out the upcoming week’s activities. Also, plan meals and arrange carpools to alleviate last-minute stress.

            Laura Fitzsmmons, another registered nurse and a single mom of three sons, ages 14, 17 and 22, schedules family meetings to discuss the week ahead during their Sunday dinners together.

            “That little bit of planning is what’s saving me right now,” says Fitzsimmons, who is a certified lymphatic specialist therapist and owner of Prairie Star Wellness in Shawnee.

            Fitzsimmons initially returned to the workforce on a part-time basis after staying home with her children for 13 years. But she went back full time soon after her husband died from a sudden heart attack in 2017. 

            “I had to learn quickly how to plan more crockpot meals,” she says. “And, when you’re working evenings, you can’t follow strict family dinnertime hours. Dinner is always on the table, but not at exactly 5:00.”

            Ask for help. When you were a stay-at-home parent, it may have been easier to manage the moving parts of a busy household.

            But once you start working, your family may have to participate more when it comes to household chores or helping with meals.

            “It took solid and honest cooperation with my husband. We had to focus on communicating about shifts in the priorities and duties around our home, as well as continue to focus on work-life balance” Carr says.

            Carpools can also help take some of the pressure off, especially when your kids are involved in multiple activities.

            Fitzsimmons relies on her older son to help with driving his younger brother to his activities.

            “If he’s not available, I’ll just put a text out to a couple of his friends in the neighborhood,” she says. “We call it the Teen Uber. I flip them five bucks for gas—it’s awesome.”

            Forgive yourself. Some days will be harder than others. Work obligations might sometimes prevent you from attending a school program, a soccer game or getting a home-cooked meal on the table.

            “I’ve learned to forgive myself,” Fitzsimmons says. “It’s ok if they have a turkey sandwich two nights in a row at dinner because that’s the best I can do. Allow yourself to be in that place of surrender and quiet and accept that it’s okay if you fail. At the end of the day, my kids have a roof over their heads, and their bellies are full—they’re fine.”           

            Carr agrees. “Outside influences do not understand your own family’s dynamic and what is in the best interest of your family. Go easy on yourself. It does no one any good to be hard on yourself when things don’t go quite right or get stressful.”

            Benefits of working parents. In addition to gaining valuable life skills like helping to prep meals, budgeting and learning personal responsibility, kids take pride in seeing their parents pursuing goals outside of the home.

            “Despite the initial guilt and stress of returning to the workforce, for my children to see continued hard work, dedication, perseverance, compassion and motivation both in the home and outside is such a true blessing,” Carr says.

The Kids Will Be Alright

Studies find that working moms tend to raise:

Source: Harvard Business School

Christa Melnyk Hines, Olathe, is a nationally published freelance writer who reentered the workforce when her youngest son was 2. She enjoys her work and is a happier mother because of it.

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