Hi Gerry:
Noticed this thread while perusing the "Monthly Activity on the forum" e-mail that Doug sent out earlier today.
I’ve been in “stay-at-home-dad” mode for just over two years. Gave up a hectic and time consuming/energy draining corporate job (at Microsoft) for one that (to me) is much more rewarding mentally and spiritually.
The past two years by far have been the best in my life. We have two kids: Ali, who will be six in July and Nathaniel, who will be four in June.
Both go to school (kindergarten and preschool) M-F, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. plus an hour or so of aftercare where they engage in arts, crafts, games, etc. with other kids their ages – activities that would practically impossible for me to provide or compete with from home. Most of the time we spend together is a couple hours in the morning and afterschool until their mom returns from work.
While some question our decision to send our 3 (almost 4)-year-old to “all day” preschool at his age, he’s as happy as a clam. He’s learning phonics; he loves books and being read to; other parents marvel as his vocabulary; he can count up a storm. At preschool he has access to learning games and crafts we couldn’t possibly provide in the house. There’s lots of things I’m good at, but when it comes to “teaching kids,” there are other folks (professional teachers) who are much better educated and experienced than I in that regard. I gladly step aside and let them do what they love and do best.
RE: 3 boys… 7, 4 and 1
You’ve definitely got your hands full. Having both our kids “out of diapers” as of about this time last year was a major step. Keep the faith. You’ve only got a couple years to go in that regard.
Count your blessings. When somebody was changing diapers on you about 40 years ago or so, the world hadn't heard of things like Pampers, wipes, diaper Genies and all that stuff!

We got it real easy compared to that.
Survival at home…
While I’m probably not the best “housekeeper” on the earth (I try... and my wife would admit, "Yes, you're very trying sometimes!"), we implemented a couple policies around the house that help keep things a little more sane, such as, eating and drinking only at the kitchen table = a lot fewer cookie or Toaster Pop crumbs to cleanup, fewer accidental spills down the cracks of the couch, etc. We’ll loosen that restriction as our youngest gets a little older.
We also work very hard at getting the kids to put toys away when they're done playing with them. Not always easy, but the more they pickup after themselves, the less for me to do in that regard.
Worked hard at teaching the kids to dress themselves. With a 1-year old too, as you know, you’ll need all the hands you can find. While I sometimes thought it was easier and faster to dress a kid myself when in a hurry, by (eventually) forcing myself to let each one learn to dress him/herself, put on/tie shoes, etc. eventually that strategy paid off.
Speaking of shoes, shoes that fasten with Velcro are the BEST, especially for ages 3-to-about-5. Kids want to put on their own shoes and want to fasten them. Velcro allows that to happen with fewer frustrations and tears.
Boxes of Kleenex and Huggies wipes deployed in several places throughout the house + in the car.
Learn from others
Subscribed to
Parents magazine and got lots of “coping” ideas, as well as general parenting techniques, recipes, ideas for games, etc. (While the title is
Parents, my impression is that many of the articles are written from a female perspective and/or for a female audience. I don’t mean any disrespect here; it’s just a reality of marketing, demographics, etc. based on traditional parenting roles. Regardless, there are usually a flock of excellent articles on various topics each month.)
RE: Getting anything done with Photoshop
I’ve found that the best times (for me) to get any real productive Photoshop work done are (literally) when everybody else is asleep, even if it means less sleep for me.
RE: Your perfectly designed chaos generator
Realize that at one, that’s his job! He’s competing with his brothers for a piece of your attention, so he’ll do anything to get it.
Though it may be frustrating at times when you feel his seemingly incessant demands conflict with your (perceived) priorities, one of the advantages of being 42 (and not 22) is the maturity and experience to realize that in the big scheme, his needs
probably really are more important than yours are at the moment. It's been my my experience that it is nearly impossible convince some (not all) 22-year olds that comforting a crying baby is more important than interrupting an assault on a video game scoring record. Some parents (regardless of age) just don't get it.
You have an opportunity that many, many fathers would love to have: nurturing and caring for a son at such a tender, dependent age. Relish and welcome the opportunity; don’t resist or resent it. It’s a gift.
I know of what I speak. I was 44 when my daughter was born; 46 when my son was born.
RE: A very good book on using positive, effective techniques for getting your kids to do what you want/what they should do w/o the need for yelling, screaming, cajolling on your part as well as theirs. An absolutely priceless tome:
1-2-3 Magic (Phelan)
OK…enough of my drivel for the moment. Looks like we're in the privileged minority so if you'd like to continue this dialog, let's do so via PM.
Hope some of this helps or at least stirs a couple braincells.
Good luck as you develop your business. I greatly admire your ambition and courage.
DannyR