As I’ve said before, I am an ultra-competitive person. So, when
I started my SAHM adventure, I wanted to do it all, all by myself. It was about
2 months in to it that I realized I couldn’t do it all – keep my house up to
the cleanliness standard I am used to, keep up with the ‘Jones’’ yard/ flowers
next door, entertain my children, exercise, cook a healthy, balanced meal for
every lunch & dinner and have something left for my husband at the end of
the day. I realized that by trying to be all things to all people, I was
unhappy, ungrateful and unloving – not a good combination for a mother of three
and wife!
At first, I outsourced in the old-fashion way – paying someone
to do it for me but I realized that it doesn’t have to be a fee-for-service arrangement.
My sister in Phoenix told me about this awesome arrangement she has with other
women in her church group where you earn tokens/ credit for watching other
children that you can use later to drop off your kids. My cousin here in town
has bailed me out on several occasions when I needed a last minute sitter. She
would never take compensation for her time so I offered to return the favor. We
now have an arrangement where I watch her two kids one morning so she can go to
Yoga and she watches mine so I can play tennis.
I’ve also talked with two different neighbor friends about a
meal exchange one night a week. One night a week I will make dinner for my
family + 2 others. Then I get their meals two other nights a week (and I don’t
have to cook- awesome!). We haven’t started this yet, but I suspect that once
we do we will wonder how we ever lived without it!
Not really outsourcing, but another strategy I’m working on
to help reduce my out-of-pocket expense, is to exchange my talents for other
services. For example – I am taking tennis lessons and have J signed up for a
4-lesson session in July at the same place. My instructore (who is also the director of the tennis center) mentioned that enrollment for youth programs has
been low so he’s thinking about cutting the number of days. I told him I would
use my best social-networking/ marketing expertise to get more folks to sign
up. I’m thinking (hoping) that we are able to lots of kids to sign up and J
will get a reduced enrollment fee.
So, while I still do pay for some things, I am trying to
find more creative ways to become a fulfilled,
happy SAHM.
Lessons I learned today:
·
Outsourcing dinner at a nice restaurant with
good friends is TOTALLY worth it!
·
Working on helping to plan my sister’s wedding
in CA, I’ve realized that while some things can/ should be outsourced, there
are some that are more fun to do yourself.
·
There are no right/ wrong answers for how to be
a SAHM. If I feel good about the ‘job’ I have done 4 or 5 days a week, I am
good with that!