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Monday, July 09, 2012

Motherhood Mondays: On finding balance

Last week, I featured seven working mothers who talked about how they try to find balance, while juggling children, marriage, jobs and everyday life. Thank you to all the lovely readers who weighed in on this important topic. I'd love to share four realizations I had...

* Maybe true "balance" doesn't exist. There are only 24 hours in a day, and if you want to spend time playing with your kids, hanging out with your friends and partner, working at a job you love and having some time for yourself to take a bath or read a book, you might not get to do each of these things, at least for as long as you'd like. Allocating time becomes a real challenge. Maybe it's less about balance and more about compromise. What I find reassuring about reading these balance interviews is knowing that no one has it 100% figured out—everyone, it seems without exception, is constantly tweaking and fiddling their schedules to make it all work.

* If you want to reach a high level in your career, you may have to work more hours than you'd like (at night, on weekends...) Not all top jobs require long hours, but many do. The recent much-discussed Atlantic article called "Why Women Still Can't Have It All" argued that if you want to rise as far as you can in your career, you will have to give up some time with your family, and if you want to maximize time with your family, you will have to ease up on your career ambitions. (It's a bold statement; do you think it's true?) Within this balance series, it felt accurate in some ways for most of these moms—many checked email or worked more at night, after putting their sweet little ones to bed. But overall, they enjoyed their careers, and that balance worked for them. It's a very personal choice about how you want to balance your career and personal life, and what's worth it to you both short- and long-term.

* Every mother has her own priorities, pressures and philosophies. It was fascinating to hear from readers who thought that a) mothers shouldn't work, b) mothers should work, c) mothers shouldn't travel away from their kids, d) mothers should take vacations without their kids, e) moms shouldn't work at night, f) mothers shouldn't spend as much money on babysitters, g) mothers should go on more dates with their husbands, etc....And it reminded me how everyone has their own desires, goals and beliefs, and that everyone should try to do what works best for them and their lovely families. There's no one right way to do it, but instead so many ways to be a great mother (and partner and person).

* Another balance series coming up! Last week's balance series featured moms who had high-powered careers, lived in cities, were married and had young children. I chose moms who were in similar situations, so that we could see how they all made different choices that worked for them. I also wanted to show that women whom we might assume "have it all" are still struggling with many of the same issues as everyone else. (The first balance series I did last summer also featured seven mothers in similar situations—these moms worked freelance, mostly from home—and again I wanted to show how a similar group of women could each make different choices that worked for them.)

But! I'd love to do another series, and this time, I'd like to feature a bunch of different kinds of working mothers—with different income levels, career paths, family situations, cultures and lifestyles—and see how their schedules are handled in different ways. Please let me know in the comments if there's any type of job or hometown or lifestyle that you'd like to see! (Down the road, we'll also do a series on stay-at-home moms, which will be fascinating, too.)

Thank you again for the amazing feedback. I was impressed by the wide-ranging responses to the series; I love your comments and am really grateful to hear your questions, thoughts, ideas and advice. We're all in it together. Lots of love. xoxo

(Painting is the "Afternoon Stroll" by Pino)

324 comments:

  1. I particularly enjoyed this series as their experience is closely related to mine. What about a series on working mothers who are pursuing other interests aside from their work?

    Or how about working mothers with older children, like ten and above?

    Another idea would be to feature working mothers of different ethnic backgrounds, i.e., Asian, European, African American, Hispanic, etc. to see if these have any impact on how they manage their families?

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  2. Anonymous11:42 PM

    I love these interviews! Always great! I'd love to hear from a single parent family, parents with divorce, and same gender couples (I think it would be great to feature more gay rhetoric and guests). :) Keep up the great work!

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  3. What about women in the trades and construction? Electricians, plumbers, contractors, metal- and ironworkers - there are few women in these careers and maybe they are a niche subset of the male-dominated fields (like engineering, math and physical sciences). And as an aside, to a little kids, especially curious boys, how cool would that be to say that mom works with excavators and makes houses and buildings?!

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  4. As a Registered Nurse, I'd love to hear about other moms who work in healthcare.

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  5. Sarah B12:13 AM

    I would love to read some on single mothers (possibly widows and those who chose to be a single mother) and at a lower income than those previously featured.

    Also, your blog and you are fantastic! :)

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  6. Academic moms (esp. university profs or post-docs) with young children.

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  7. Anonymous12:25 AM

    Thank you so much for doing this series- they really are wonderful interviews.

    I would also love to hear about women in healthcare or full time students. I am about to begin medical school and also looking at starting a family before too long. I feel that the assumption is often that you should wait to have children until after school, but sometimes that just isn't an option (especially with training as long as it is to become a doctor), so I would love to get some perspectives on that situation.
    Thanks!

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  8. this was another great series and great summary to boot! there is no one perfect solution and when you think you've figured it out, life will change on you. i enjoyed these series because it gave a peek into the lives of working moms not because they provided some secret formula for making it work. for future series, can you please incorporate some diversity and have some women of color!

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  9. Wow to Olive's comment. You should interview her!!

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  10. Joanna,

    This was by far one of my favourite series you have featured - thanks for the insights! I especially like how you posted your thoughts on what you'd learned & incorporated reader feedback. For your upcoming feature, I'd love to you to include an interview with a teacher. How do they balance the incredible demands of students, parents, administration, etc? As a former teacher myself (I had to give it up because I couldn't find a balance), I'd love to see women who have found a way to suceed and balance their work and lives!

    Thanks!

    ~ S

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  11. Sorry for the second comment...

    I'd also love to see interviews featuring women from different cultures. Oftentimes, women from East Asia (especially Pakistan and India) face different cultural pressures regarding delaying marriage, delaying children, working outside of the home one they've had children, etc. I'd love to see how the new generation is handling these pressures.

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  12. Sorry for the second comment...

    I'd also love to see interviews featuring women from different cultures. Oftentimes, women from East Asia (especially Pakistan and India) face different cultural pressures regarding delaying marriage, delaying children, working outside of the home one they've had children, etc. I'd love to see how the new generation is handling these pressures.

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  13. Anonymous12:31 AM

    This was a great series and I loved reading about all the amazing moms who juggle work and family. I would love to hear about single moms, too. Thank-you for these wonderful posts. They are so encouraging. You are right. We are all in this together.

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  14. Alexandra L.1:01 AM

    An interesting, enjoyable read!

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  15. So excited to read you will be continuing this series -- based on the feedback from your readers, it is absolutely positively clear that we come from SUCH a wide range of backgrounds and experiences...it just reinforces to me how ridiculous the "mommy wars" really are. There is never going to be a one size fits all approach to being a good mother -- you do what you need to do for your family, to raise your children as decent, upstanding human beings, and I find it counterproductive to pass any judgement on how someone else chooses to reach that goal. I think us moms could put the energy wasted on the same old arguments like working moms vs SAHM, breast milk vs. formula, etc etc into much more productive conversation...maybe your series here will be a start in the right direction :).

    Anyway, I'm definitely looking forward to reading about more middle-class working moms...women who I can probably relate to a bit more at a socioeconomic level. I also second suggestions to highlight single moms or moms with special needs kids. My mother was widowed when I was 12 and was a single mother to myself and my older autistic sister...so I saw first hand how absolutely superhuman these women can be.

    And to address your second point about reaching a high level in your career -- I have to say that the statement regarding career and family is absolutely true and it's one I've been struggling with on a daily basis. I am a work at home freelance designer, and I truly love what I do but I have felt my work and career stall a bit the past year. I currently work mostly half days during work hours and catch up a lot on evenings after bedtime. I have a babysitter for 2 half days and 1 whole day every week so I can set aside work hours, but honestly it ends up being not only work time, but running errands time, taking a breather from life time, etc. I know with 100% certainty if I opted for more childcare for my toddler daughter I would definitely be able to pursue my work more aggressively, much like how I did pre-motherhood...but that time with my daughter and if I'm also a bit honest, with my mommy friends and their kids (the same age as my daughter), isn't something I want to give up right now. I know this period in her life is extremely short and precious, and the relationships I have been able to build in my first year of motherhood have been so rewarding for me. HOWEVER, there are also a number of practical concerns -- the fact that my income is still necessary for our family budget since we have a mortgage and numerous monthly bills (a small reason why I keep working, though thankfully not my only)... I am also a partner in a fledging side business that could desperately use more of my attention but as the only one who has kids, I have an very different set of priorities when it comes to how I use my time. So right now I ride a constant stream of compromises but have yet to hit upon an ideal balance. And this is why I am loving being able to read about other moms dealing with the same thing, even if they do live more glamorous lives than I do.

    Sorry for the lengthy comment, but thank you again for starting such a great and relevant conversation and I am super excited to hear from many more moms!

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  16. Anonymous1:19 AM

    Ditto on the moms in the medical field. As an Ob/gyn, it is my job to support women as they build their families, but often my job gets in the way of my own. Would love to hear about how more lady doctors do it!

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  17. Make a book! Make a book! Make a book!

    Loving this series - nothing to add - just more, please!

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  18. I'd like to see moms with three kids and more.

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  19. Hi Joanna,
    Great topic! I would like to hear what the children think about the careers of their parent and the juggling.
    Marjolein

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  20. Michelle2:15 AM

    This may have already been said but most moms interviewed mentioned having great help for the little ones whether for a large amount of time or a small. I would love to know where and how they found great help - after all it IS hard to find (at least that is the thing we are struggling with right now)

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  21. Dear Joanna, I am your reader from Europe. Thank you for the wonderful interviews that helped me realize that I am not alone with my problems. My career is not nearly as big and as important as mothers in your interviews, but my husband thinks that my best achievement is business that I do and I love it. Reading the past seven interviews, I often found myself in thinking "my situation is very similar to their situation, they also do not have enough time to play with their children, they also have lack of quality time spent with their husband..." Thank you once again and looking forward to read the next series of interviews.

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  22. i loved the interviews, i'm waiting for more!!!
    kisses from Poland :)

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  23. thank you for these interviews, it is very interesting. I would like to read an interview with the mother, who was released and begins to work alone at home, how to organize time and handle problems?
    I greet

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  24. I love your series Joanna :) It gives me a glimpse of the world of these amazing women. We have stay-in helpers in our home (I live in Manila), and Im a mom of 2, and my office is a mere 10-minute walk from the office. But still I can relate to wanting to go home early so I can be the one to prepare dinner for my family, and spend quality time. At 6pm, Im itching to go home! And everyday I dread the boss will still call a meeting at 530pm! So I think wherever you are in the world, there's just too little time when it comes to spending time with family.

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  25. I am not a mom yet but I figured things are VERY different in the US and in most European countries (I am from Austria) - I think an international Balance series would be great!

    And concerning that Diane Keaton movie - it´s called Baby Boom and I love to watch it every now and then :)

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  26. I would love to see an interview of a mother who is struggling against insurmountable circumstances that are beyond her control. I want to see a mother who against all odds rises up and fights against adversity, who gave birth not only to beautiful children but an unbreakable spirit that drives her to protect and nurture against all odds.

    I want to see an interview of a mother who loves in soft whispers but who fights with a mighty strength because she has no choice.

    I want to see an interview of a mother who kisses her children tenderly during the day but weeps herself to sleep at night.

    I want to see an interview of that same mother who meets the rising of a new day with a roar that only another mother knows. The roar of being a mother.

    I want to see an interview of a mother that no one can understand how she does it because against all odds she should fail. Instead she roars because she IS a mother.

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  27. i loved this series! and would like to see a series on mums in other countries than the US (and with less high-profile jobs). thanks!

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  28. Anonymous5:21 AM

    Great series, thank you. For me, the main thing that I noticed was the fact that all these women had a very supportive / flexible on hours husband.
    And I agree with many comments that I would love to see people who are on tighter resources and struggling with the cost of childcare. Thanks

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  29. I would like to see an interview with women who work in politics.

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  30. Anonymous7:47 AM

    Echoing the single moms - but esp SINGLE MOMS BY CHOICE please!

    Also, did anyone else notice the lack of a second foot on both women in painting? Ironically, this makes balance difficult. Love the painting otherwise, but the lack of second feet is too distracting!

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  31. I am constantly asking myself how the others manage it .... so I enjoyed your series a lot ... to see, that we are all in the same sit.uation :)

    I am a mom of 2 (3y,6m) and I left a high paid job for my kids and sometimes miss the action that an office job included. But as the second baby was born and I have spent one week with one hand polished and one not, I definitely realized that I am not having a chance to handle an office job right now.
    But I love my kids and am nit able to give this time of their life to a babysitter full time in any reason.

    Me and my husband own a marketing and brand consulting company so I became the "creative department" of it and my office means my Bberry.

    It works. Somehow and last week we even happen to go for a concert together, kids excluded.

    I ask myself what did I do with all the time before I had kids and why I don't speak at least four languages?

    If you will prepare a series about moms from Europe - I apply :)

    Eva, Slovakia

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  32. Again, a great series!

    Like other women, I'd like to hear from single moms and moms who are in school full time.

    I'd also love to hear from women in academia. Perhaps this is because my own mother raised me and my brother while getting her PhD and working (and she was newly divorced from my father!). I still don't know how she managed to do it all, though she has told me that having us kids to take care of actually motivated her to get more done in less time. Also, she wasn't afraid to take me and my brother to the classes she taught, tote us along to the university library, and invite us to sit with her grad student friends at the dinners she occasionally hosted. It was an incredible experience for me growing up, and I'd love to hear how other moms in school/academia do it.

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  33. I would love to see some with moms who are in retail management. Lots of night and weekend hours, no set schedule... With my husband in an extremely high stress job, I am stepping down and changing my career path so that we can be more of a team at night with our daughter.
    Love this series! :)

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  34. Ooh! I just saw the idea about women in trades/construction. That would be great, too.

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  35. I would love to see either a single mom, or a mom (working or SAHM) whose spouse travels heavily. A military mom would also be interesting. My husband is a consultant and as we contemplate kids I wonder how these women do it on their own so many days of the week.

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  36. I don't know if someone has said this already, but I would love it if you featured a mother who lives in a high cost of living area (big cities), but works in a lower paying job (i.e. nonprofit)! Thanks for doing this series!

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  37. Anonymous9:08 AM

    I would love to see a series on stay at home dads, but really, I would just love to see a series on dads. I personally think that the biggest issue in the whole balance debate is that it seems like women are the only ones having this conversation (or maybe our society and culture seems to make it feel like only women are the ones who should be or need to be having this conversation - wrong, I think).

    Love this whole series!
    Diane

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  38. My husband and I work opposite schedules, so one of us is always at home with our 8 month old son. He is a bartender and I work as an art director at an ad agency. We've both changed our schedules to avoid day care. He left an office job to be a bartender and Mr. Mom during the day. I was able to change my schedule to be home when my husband is working. I would love to hear how other parents work with this same situation. Also, what it's like to have a husband that is a stay at home dad - how to give up that control/micro-managing. We don't see each other much, but feel it's what is best for our family.

    Thanks - this is a fantastic series!

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  39. Parents in academia or other professions that are time-sensitive (i.e the tenure clock)? Academic parents who live or work in different cities? This is something I think a lot about.

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  40. Anonymous10:15 AM

    Lesbian mums, working class mums who can't afford babysitters or private childcare, single mums, black women, muslim women... all of these would be much more interesting than just well-off, educated white women.

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  41. Kristi10:18 AM

    A mom who is a teacher. I have a 1-year old and am trying to find a job in education but can't decide whether I can do as good of a job teaching as I did before having my daughter.

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  42. Anonymous10:19 AM

    Loved the series. I think you were right to say that each mother has a way of "balancing" what is especially important to her. Everyone makes different choices, but it is inspiring to see how other women do it. I was a stay at home mom, but if I did it over, I think I would work as a teacher.

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  43. Anonymous10:20 AM

    Let's hear it for the single moms. I think a series on single moms, and families with tighter budgets would be great. These are all wonderful but seems like most of these folks have the money to afford at home nannies or personal child care. Many others can't afford that luxury.

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  44. Hi Joanne,
    I'm a resident in Radiology and my husbands is a transplant surgeon. We have very inflexible, irregular hours and a baby that is six months old. I just restarted work a month ago. We live in Switzerland, away from my family, but close to his. I'm slowly starting to figure it out and am happy to share my experiences, but I'm also eager to hear how others in our situation balance things. Seema

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  45. Hi there!
    I loved this series!

    I am 26 years old, a designer in New York. I am of course, not married and without kids however I read this blog and I would love to see a series on working women who balance - Boyfriend - Friends - Family - Job - Home - Working Out - Travel. All those things take time and add up!!!

    Anything about working women in their late 20s would be great to read about!

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  46. I am a full-time high school English teacher. I make under $40,000/year, and I bring work home with me almost every night. I would love to know how different teachers handle the stress and time needed for teaching. I'm thinking of having children in a couple of years, but my career scares me out of it a little bit. So many teachers have children, but with financial restrictions and exhaustion that comes from teaching, I just don't know what it will be like. Should I quit my job when I have kids or continue working? Is daycare more expensive than it's worth with a teacher's salary? So many questions!

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  47. Thank you for this post! I stumbled upon this series last week, and I added you to bloglovin! This has been my BIGGEST struggle since becoming a Mom (my son is now 18 months, and I'm pregnant due in Oct w/ my daughter). Things that I thought were important before him aren't as important anymore. I live in a big city - Houston, and I work FT. I work in a very demanding charter school as a teacher (10+ hours a day, hours in the evenings / early mornings, and weekends). I've always been very driven, but I'm realizing work isn't as important. I'm also very creative and artistic, and I've been trying to pursue other ventures and maybe dream of working at home. I envy or wonder how Moms that seem to do it all - DO IT - whether bloggers, on TV, in "real life" etc. I'm trying my best, but I do get disappointed in how I balance myself, myself with my husband, my son... my friends, my work, etc. I'm home alone w/ him this summer, and you'd think I'd be able to accomplish a ton, but as you know, tots are demandning! If you ever want to interview or talk to me more, I have much more to add to this subject area! madmaxandfamily at gmail

    -Tara
    http://madmaxandfamily.blogspot.com
    http://blog.chron.com/madabouttown/

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  48. I know we all deal with balance but I honestly don't think that SAHM face the same issues. There is definitely a time management issue of course! But in terms of balance, at least from what i see with my friends, is non-existent. They focus on family and yes they manage their time to exercise, spend time with friends, do hobbies and get alone time but it's not a balancing act because they're not working outside the home.

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  49. Healthcare moms or healthcare dads!

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  50. Just wanted to say that I totally appreciate your neutral, supportive tone in your posts and your willingness to offer your blog as a space to hold this very important conversation!

    Looking forward to the variety of family stories in the future :)

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  51. I would like to hear from more moms like myself, who are working but not by choice, and who are struggling with the things we are forced to give up as a result. I feel like the conversation is always about "choice" -- but not all of us get to choose. I find myself in a position where I don't get to do all the things I would like to do with my children, which makes me worry for them and for me, but I don't love my job, I don't feel passionate about my career, so it doesn't feel like a trade-off, or balance -- it just feels, frankly, like it stinks. I also would be interested in hearing from divorced mothers -- I see lots of posts here asking about the perspective of "single" mothers, but I am not sure whether that includes divorced moms, or just moms who had kids on their own. My children's father is very much in the picture and we share custody, but when it's me, it's just me. At any rate, thanks for continuing this important conversation!

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  52. Thanks for doing these series! I'm glad you're considering featuring different types of moms. I found I didn't relate to this last group of women at all. I'd love to hear from the (not rich!) moms that work because they have to in order to pay the bills or have the insurance. How do you find joy and balance in that scenario? Thanks again!

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  53. Anonymous11:28 AM

    I am an architect. Love to hear about someone who is working in the field and raising a family. I know its so hard. thanks

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  54. I loved these and look forward to the ones coming up. I'll be a stay-at-home mom come November and am both very excited and very nervous!

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  55. Anonymous11:35 AM

    everyone you featured has 1-2 kids - I'm the oldest of 4 and my mom always had a full-time job. would love to hear about some larger families that 1 child and 1 on the way!

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  56. Alexandra11:53 AM

    I'd love to see a comparaison of mothers who have the same kind of jobs and who live in different countries!

    I remember you posting interesting insights on child care in Scandinavia, France, etc. - it would be interesting to know how these mothers' days look like!

    Also, mothers who are CEOs?

    Btw, I wanted to mention that this work/life balance issue is a relatively new one: up until maybe 70 years ago kids from well-off families were raised mostly by nannies (and even not so well-off ones - remember how a pennyless Agatha Christie left her kids with a nanny for a year and left for a world trip with her husband?), and kids from lower classes were a lot by themselves, playing on the street while their mothers worked. None of these two options seemed to bother people...

    So, this is actually the first time in history someone asked women to have it all... (including romantic dates with their husbands, something that, let's say, until the late 19th century was not necessarily on the agenda).

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  57. Anonymous11:59 AM

    Would love to see a post about Moms who teach, especially secondary or higher-education, and the unique workarounds of the academic calendar.

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  58. As someone who is currently contemplating HOW (and if) children will fit into my life - a life that I currently LOVE, including a job that I adore - I would loooooove if you would focus on how a teacher deals with balance.

    For teachers it's really hard to leave work at work - with marking and planning and all that comes with education - and even though many people think that teachers have it easy and work great hours, they always fail to realize how much time teachers actually spend working AT HOME.

    I would love to know how teachers who love teaching actually find a way to balance this!.... then maybe I'll give starting a family a go!

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  59. First of all, I'm so glad you're doing these series! I don't even have kids, but I'm a self-employed married lady who imagines someday I will want to...And will still want to work.
    In regard to the next series - I am always interested to know how creative couples make it work. Creative industries typically don't pay as well and/or often involve freelancing. Most of the creative couples I know stress about being able to feel like they can afford kids. So I would love to hear more about how couples where both people are creatively-employed make finances/time/kids work.

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  61. Smaxcro1:13 PM

    I'm a married mother of one little boy. My husband and I both work full-time out of the home as creatives (videographer, writer) for our alma mater. I also play roller derby, and that has a huge impact on how we balance things. It's an enormous time commitment (five hours a week of practice, plus bouts and service on two committees) and it's a challenge for the whole family, but we make it work. Almost all of my friends are stay-at-home moms, so I have really enjoyed reading how other working moms handle things. I'd love to hear from someone like me, who manages full-time employment and a time-consuming personal hobby. When you do the stay-at-home mom series, I'd also love to hear from a mom who had previously worked out of the home after having children and decided to leave the rat race. It's something that I fantasize about but at the same time I can't fathom actually doing it.

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  62. Anonymous1:43 PM

    I liked your series :)
    A large part of the population works shift work (nurses, doctors,etc) switching between day, evening and night shifts. Being a nurse myself i'd be interested in hearing how others who work shift work manage to jungle children, marraige, work and social life while haveing to work shift... adding a definite unstabel aspect to every day life.

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  63. Personally,I've found these interviews of mothers sharing their schedules quite fascinating. keep them coming!good job!

    Silvia

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  64. I'd love to hear from moms who love their jobs *and* who negotiated a change that allowed them some more time with family. How they went about it; what push-back they got; salary issues, etc. A girlfriend of mine proposed and got a 4-day work week while still getting paid full time; so inspiring!

    I've also learned a lot from the interviews and stories at the Third Path Institute -- a non-profit that's all about people making time for life, family, and work, in a hundred different ways. No prescriptions, just creative thinking. I think you might like them, too.

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  65. Maybe something in the Boston area?

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  66. I'm loving everything about this discussion! Thank you for doing it!

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  68. Anonymous2:40 PM

    I would like to here from all those moms who have re-entered the work force after their children leave the nest. Many of us had careers we felt we had to give up in the '80s and we are now faced with recreating ourselves. What do you think...?

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  69. Such a lovely series. And I'm not even a Mom. I would love to hear stories from the trenches - single moms, lower incomes, different locations.

    I'm a single actress in LA. I recently started dating my boyfriend. I don't know if I'll ever have kids, but this series has been intriguing to me.

    Just for *fun*, I would love to see what it's really like, being a ridiculously rich woman with kids. Do they even have much interaction with them at all? I see a lot of nannies with strollers in Beverly Hills. I wonder if when "having it all" (mansion, Rolls, money out the wazoo), the kids just become one of the possessions.

    On the contrary, I see a lot of immigrant families with LOTS of kids, making it work on peanuts of a budget. That amazes me as well. While I'm struggling to pay my rent and support myself, I think - oh my god, how could I ever feed any kids!

    Thanks for these provoking interviews! I love peeks into people's lives. We're all doing the best we can.

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  70. How about a Doctor Mom. We have two sets of people (our children and our patients) who always need us, and neither understand when we have to leave one to tend to the other.

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  71. Oh and p.s. an interview with a schoolteacher would be great! They're around kids all day, but not their own kids, and they have the same problems with taking kids to doctor, etc. during the day.

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  72. And almost NO men can "have it all" since most of them seem to work full-time jobs, and miss out on most of their kids growing up? Just a thought related to "Why Women Still Can't Have It All". I'm from Sweden and find it so sad to, between the lines, read about absent fathers.

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  73. Sarah4:02 PM

    Hi Joanna!

    I am fascinated by the balance series. Though I am
    not a mother myself (nor do I even have a boyfriend!) I am
    a nurse and know someday I will need to find the balance between my absolute LOVE for my career and my future children. I would love to read about how nurses find that balance.

    Thank you!

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  74. Anonymous4:03 PM

    i know that this is a motherhood series, but i would love to see you feature some DADS!

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  75. I would love to read about women with brick & mortar stores & how being 'at the shop' affects their family life.
    My husband & I just relocated to my (very small) hometown with our
    3 yr old son to open a skincare studio/cosmetic boutique. He is a former lighting tech that was on the road 4 days a wk doing concerts & wanted to be home more. It's a big risk with us both leaving successful careers but we wanted a better quality of life for our family. It's already been a sigh of relief having a smalltown life but smiling everyday I walk into our little shop.

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  76. I LOVE these series!!! And I think it would be so great to hear about a fashion mom. Someone who has a very glamourous job but who has to deal with everything that running a home implies. What do you think? :)

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  77. Would love to see a mother who left one field when she had kids and is creating a new job that works with her parenting duties. I know this is a situation that I and my friends find ourselves in--once our kids are school aged we can't or don't want to go back to the jobs we left and need to start a new career. I'd like to hear more about how people do that, especially while they continue to juggle the same responsibilities of home and family they did when they took time off from paid work.

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  78. Anonymous6:17 PM

    Single moms!
    I'm trying to get a freelance career going, after too many exhausting years as a prof. I'm so tired of articles that suggest a chat with hubby is the answer to issues of 'balance'!

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  79. I love this series as someone who plans to have a baby in the next few years. A lot of my friends have one or two babies already, and some of them are full-time stay-at-home mothers. They know that I plan to work full-time when I have kids. We are sensitive to each others' feelings on the topic of staying at home or working, since it's such a personal decision and it is easy to feel judged by others.

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  80. Anonymous7:29 PM

    Could you do a series on motherhood abroad? My husband and I plan to have kids in the next few years and there's a chance that I might be in Europe during that time for work. I thought your post on "Bringing up Bebe" was so interesting and it seems like there's a number of women bloggers who have been overseas with kids.

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  81. How about featuring moms that freelance or are independent contractors with stay-at-home/unemployed dads and the pressure that the moms have to be the sole provider for the family? Freelance/independent contractor moms I think worry more about things such as health insurance.

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  82. LOVE this series! Can you feature moms who have kids in daycare situations? Having to wake kids up early, shuffle them out the door, work a full day, and then rush to pick them up, make dinner, etc. is such a challenge and I'd love to see how other moms handle it.

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  83. Unfortunately, I do think it's impossible to have it all. I definitely do think it is possible to be a great mom while having a successful career, but of course you have to give up some time and involvement with your family. On the other hand, there are plenty of ways to have a satisfying work life while giving more of your time and energy to your family. It's definitely all about figuring it out for yourself. That said, these are definitely luxury issues, since many women are not in a position to have so much choice!

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  84. I would love to hear from single mothers and/or blended families.

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  85. I'm not a mom, but I found this series fascinating. Even without kids, I still struggle to find the balance I want in my life. Honestly, reading about these moms' struggles really made the idea of having children even less appealing to me.

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  86. I will second wondering about how people in the medical field balance work and family. I am a medical resident married to a medical resident and we both work 80-100 hours a week including nights and weekends without spare cash for a nanny (med school loans, blah blah). We are currently pregnant with our first since we decided to throw career advice to the wind. I know there are others out there who have done this and live talk about it but they are hard to find. If anyone has advice on this- please share!

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  87. Joanna, I absolutely love these series! Being a mom to a 5 year old and an 18 month old born with a congential heart defect and then also working full time from home on my own Jewlery design company, the struggle to balance is always there. It's refreshing to hear these amazing stories!! Thanks so much Bonnie - Gwen Delicious Jewlery Designs

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  88. I loved the series, once again. I would hope to hear from a woman who owned a small business (either by herself or with her partner). My partner and I run our small business and I would love to hear if other moms do the silly things I do sometimes to get it all done. Thanks so much for doing these series!

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  89. Julie Cartee12:30 AM

    Why not women from the deep south? And No the Carolinas don't count and not even Georgia... How about a very successful woman from Mississppi or alabama? I just feel like these 2 states get the worst wrap for everything... Erika Powell of Urban Grace Interiors (Design Firm and blog would be awesome) or yeah just SOMEONE SOUTHERN! :) hahaha love your blog by the way!!

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  90. Joanna,
    This series is so spectacular. I really love it. I"m a stay at home mom basically with some work projects from time to time. I've been approached about an opportunity that would be amazing and would change my set up right now big time. Im trying to be realistic about what working more means and waht having it all means specially to me. This series helped me think some things through. Again, as always your blog has such a positive energy that it opens up dialogue and support. Love love love it! Thank you for spreading that feel amongst women.

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  91. Anonymous8:46 AM

    As I read the seven women's perspectives, it did occur to me that not all couples can take a yearly trip away together (which seemed to be a common trend among the seven). I would love to hear about families who live off smaller incomes, and how the parents find ways to connect with one another, without spending big bucks to get away. Thanks! All very interesting! :)

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  92. Amanda9:42 AM

    I'd love to see a series on women who AREN'T mothers balancing life.

    I think we have a tendency of assuming that women without children have all the time in the world, but that isn't true. Women without children often still struggle with balancing relationships, careers, and "me" time.

    These series are interesting so far but they seem to make the assumption that all women want a life with kids.

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  93. freckleface10:36 AM

    I think you should also do one about fathers. stay at home dads, fathers that are the care takers and work a 9-5 job. my father for example travels for his job a lot and can be gone for up to a month at a time. my parents are workaholics and also divorced. I was basically raised by my grandmother or babysitters. I think it would also to be cool to ask men/women in their 20s and 30s if they liked how their parents raised them and how they would change it when they become parents

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  94. I would love at least one interview from an educator. I am a school counselor, and every educator I know--teachers, administrators, other student services personnel--works LONG hours. I often work 12 hour days and still don't finish everything; I panic at the thought of what I will have to compromise when my husband and I have a baby in a few years.

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  95. I'll throw my hat into the ring, although I think several others have already touched on the subject. We are beginning to discuss the possibility of children and one thing we struggle with: is it worth it for me to go back to work when so much of our 2nd income would go to childcare? I'd love to hear from people who have done both (going back to work and paying for child care vs. SAHM) and why they decided on it. Esp. where the mother is the "breadwinner", as I am :)

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  96. I would love to hear how single working moms find balance. This is completely opposite from me - I have a wonderful husband who loves to spend time w/our daughter, we're expecting #2, and I'm not currently working because we haven't figured out how my profession will happen with two small kids (and too sick during pregnancy!). I feel overwhelmed sometimes, so how do single moms do it??

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  97. Anonymous4:55 PM

    what about moms like me who primarily work from home and are married to stay at home dads

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  98. I'm glad you said about stay at home mom's i think it's really interesting to see. my parents had it pretty worked out i think, because my dad went out to work a full time week and my mum did two jobs, cleaning houses within our village & making gloves, though she no longer does the latter.

    what about families that live far away from their jobs and aren't in the city. my bosses family ended up with his wife taking a break from her career, she runs her own HR/ training company & him still running his business- the pub I work in- but his hours are so long that sometimes, early evenings, the children come out to say good night to him & i always wish he would be there to put his children to bed. I feel like he's missing out sometimes, especially since the hospitality industry is such odd hours. However, he is very quick to point out that he has a few hours with them in the afternoons when they get back from school, which other Dad's don't have.

    it's not that i think mothers shouldn't work or shouldn't be able to do the same types of jobs that men do; i believe in equality. but i think having children is such a life changing thing that if you decide to do that then you need to put your children and your relationship with them before anything else... and there are some parents who i don't think do that.

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  99. Would be fascinated to hear how mother's from different cultures and event in different countries handle the balance. Could be very insightful. Thank you!

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  100. Anonymous8:14 AM

    Hi! I would love to read about women who work as daycare teachers. I am one myself and I, while I want kids, I don't know if I want to continue to work with small children when I have a small child myself at home. Plus, would it be better for your kid to go to your daycare or put him/her into a different one?

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  101. Jessica11:53 AM

    I'd love to hear from professors/academia ladies!!

    Also - maybe a feature on step-moms/women with partner who have kids??

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  102. Anonymous12:16 PM

    I would love to hear about the balance of a RN in a hospital. I am a nurse who works three 12 hour shifts a week. My husband had a 9-5 sometimes flexible m-f job. We are trying to get pregnant but I am concerned how we will balance having a baby into our lives and work schedules.

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  103. Anonymous7:30 PM

    The happiest I've ever been is after my second child when I finally accepted that I enjoyed returning to work and that I loved my job. What works for every mother and family is so individual. It is really encouraging to read how these mothers make it work. The essence of being a mother is making it work, that's why we're so amazing :-)

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  104. I am a full time working mom in Minneapolis. I am an accessory designer and moved from NYC just before my 2 year old was born because I knew I wouldn't be able to support both my career & son at the same time.

    Anyway, love your series. It's so great to just hear about other moms. Mostly because it helps me not feel so guilty that I'm not super mom :) Thanks for doing these!

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  105. Anonymous10:37 AM

    I'd love to see mom's who are NURSES! Nurses work 12 hour shifts, 4 days in a row, sometimes days, sometimes nights. Scheduling could be crazy and I'd love to see how someone could make it work!

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  106. Stella T.11:05 AM

    I love these series! One suggestion: have you ever considered doing a series on Fathers? So many of these women mention their amazing husbands and partners... I'd love to hear the male perspective on balancing family/work life, especially since their roles are not as traditionally cookie-cutter as they used to be!

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  107. i would also love to see how other stay at home moms, like myself do it, especially with not so big incomes. It sounds like in this last series, most of the moms could afford resources like nannies, sitters, or the husbands work at home. I would love to see how mom's balance their family as well as their creative outlets or interests.

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  108. E Tells Tales! (was that the "Elizabeth" who already commented??) either way, she's going back to work in rural Alabama, and leaving her recently unemployed dear husband at home. She's a fantastic writer, and would make a great profile!

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  109. Dear Jo:

    I love your blog, It's not only amusing but also inspiring ... and different.
    Thank you for sharing this with us.

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  110. Hi Joanna,

    I never comment but wanted to say THANK YOU for doing these series - they are definitely up there as 'favorite things' you post. So interesting, insightful and comforting to know that there are so many 'right' ways to do this thing called motherhood.

    Thanks,

    Anne

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  111. Hi Joanna,

    I really liked the series and I think alot of great suggestions have been made. While the interviews of successful career mothers were interesting, I'm an under 30 mom STARTING a demanding career. I'd love to see interviews about that.

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  112. I don't really think it is any different for the mother or the father when it comes to career goals. The difference is in society's expectations of mothers versus fathers. Men must sacrifice time at home with families to reach higher in their career, just as a woman must. The difference is that according to society, it is ok for the man to do this, but if the woman does it makes her less of a mother.

    I don't have any children yet, but after knowing many mothers and reading your series, I see that balance is different from family to family. It is about balancing expectations between the mother and father and trying to come to an agreement about how they will handle their career lives.

    Thanks for the series. it is very thought provoking.

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  113. I'd like to hear from women who move back to their hometowns to be close to their families when the time comes to have children. My husband and I are thinking more and more of doing this. I'd also like to hear from women who continue to work and have their husbands stay at home with the kids.

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  114. In the wake of news of Marissa Mayer's appointment to Yahoo!'s CEO and her now being six months pregnant, I began listening to a Computer History Museum event with Marissa Mayer on YouTube and found it fascinating, especially when she talks about "finding your rhythm" and setting boundaries when it comes to avoiding being resentful at or of work (http://youtu.be/Dyvd9fyXpDM, around 1:19:42). P.S. I also love what Mayer says about being gender-blind. Psychologist Barbara Kerr also talks about this being a quality of successful gifted women in her book "Smart Girls, Gifted Women."

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  115. P.S. Meaning, I would love for you to interview Marissa Mayer for an upcoming work-balance series, Joanna, especially after she's had the baby. :) She's in our age group and incredibly well spoken.

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  116. Anonymous1:10 PM

    I would absolutely love to read a series about how men balance it all.

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  117. Anonymous8:14 PM

    I'd love to hear about professional city moms with multiple kids. I have a 14 mo old and would like a couple more kids, but my husband thinks even 2 would be crazy.

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  118. Oh, wow. I'm going to have to read ALL of this series (just stumbled on it via Offbeat Mama). Haven't read most of the comments on this post, but will agree with the second one I saw: please do a bit on single working moms! My selfish desire, of course: I am one, and am always looking for more balancing tricks.

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  119. Claire2:23 PM

    how about mothers who have jobs with unusual hours, and very little opportunity for breaks - I am a chef, and wondering how to juggle that with being a mother once i go back to work. not an office, no space or time to pump breastmilk, etc.. love to hear about a mother in this situation! thanks!

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  120. I am currently a surgery resident and mom and would love to see an interview by a doctor-mom and how she handled the balance, especially if they had children during residency. I work 80+ hours per week and am in surrounded by males who don't understand what I'm going through. Thanks! And I loved both series on balancing work and motherhood!

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  121. I've loved looking back at all of your amazing mommy impowerment posts. I'm a mother, chef, and military wife. It might be interesting for you to feature someone that is a military spouse. We have a pretty interesting life with complications that other wives don't necessarily have to ever juggle (husband deployed for 13 mo). Just a suggestion! :)

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  122. I love reading all of your mommy empowerment posts! I'm a mom, chef, and military wife. I think it would be interesting for you to feature someone who goes through the special challenges that military spouses go through (husband deployed for 13 mo). Just a suggestion!

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  123. My sister is a single mom who works a factory job in rural Indiana. She should be interviewed for this. She just gave up a very stressful, higher paying job to be home in the evenings with her two boys. I'd also be interested in sharing my story. I'm a new mom after building an engineering career for 10 years. I'm basically a single mom during the week because my husband flies for a living and is gone from Monday to Thursday. I have life extremely more easy financially than my sister, but she has more balance, I'd say. Maybe we could be interviewed as a pair. I think her story is the type that is missing in these types of discussions, but is more prevalent through the US.

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  124. Thank you so much for this series. Reading the stories of these working moms is so wonderfully comforting. The break downs over needing a pedicure, eating out often, putting other things on hold as a result of new responsibilites and so may other things fortifies a sense of this incredible connection that we all have.

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