Work - Family

Reality Check: After-Hours Work

By Trisha Thompson, Parenting
Trisha Thompson
 


Share
Q. My boss often asks me to stay late for meetings made longer by chitchat. I don't want anyone to doubt my work ethic, but how can I get more respect for family time?

A.
Even the most dedicated working mom can become defensive when coworkers start messing with her schedule. B.C. (Before Children), your workplace might have seemed more relaxed, and there was no reason to rush out each evening. But once there are kids to get home to, it's hard not to resent anyone who steals your time with them. Remember, though, that the occasional schmoozefest around the conference table is necessary -- to help you bond with coworkers and to solidify you as a team player. This should at least help you tolerate the chatting as well as their obliviousness to your circumstances.

But tolerance won't get you home any earlier. Have a talk with your boss. Forget about critiquing the general wisdom of meetings after 5:00 -- if most of your coworkers are fine with it, you're not going to overthrow the majority. And don't appeal to your boss's emotional side, even if she's a working mom too -- it's not in her job description to consider your child's dinnertime. Stick to the facts: You can make special arrangements to stay late a few days a month for planned meetings or established deadlines. Otherwise, you'll need to leave on time to get home or pick up your kids.

Assure your boss that you'll have a colleague give you the notes from impromptu post-workday meetings the next morning. And, if she seems responsive, you can try suggesting lunchtime meetings as an alternative that's more conducive to everyone's work schedule.

No matter what understanding you come to, however, there will invariably be times when a 4:00 meeting runs way over, and you'll have to decide how to exit gracefully. You're probably afraid that this will make you prey to mommy tracking. But your life is on a different path now -- your priorities have changed. And that's okay. Life experience is valuable in and out of the office, and smart bosses know that good parents can also be good workers.


PRINT

Comments

No comments yet. Log in or register below to be the first.
Quick Poll

When was the last time you bought yourself something pretty, just because?

This week
This month
This year
A luxury just for me? Ha!


ADVERTISEMENT
Popular on Parenting.com
Popular on Parenting.com
 
Photo Galleries

30+ Easy Ways to Pamper Yourself

Treating yourself can be cheap (even free!) and fast if you follow these relaxing, refreshing tips for mom

promotion
 
Health

Join the Fit Generation

Become a member for a chance to win two amazing family trips

Blog: Project Pregnancy

Jennifer Johnson: "'A few weeks ago I had a dream I was pregnant with an alien. It's on the weird side but not as strange as my friend who had a dream she birthed robotic puppies and tried to nurse them." Updated frequently!

Blog: The Parenting Post

My Brown Baby: "My girls' toys reflect the truly diverse world they live in, where the kids who fill their school rooms and playgroups speak different languages and come from different countries and backgrounds and income levels and aren't necessarily a bunch of frilly little tea-toting girls." Updated daily!

30 Brand-New Birthday Cakes

ALL NEW! Super cute and easy birthday cakes you can make from store-bought cake, frosting and candy
Health

19 Famous People with ADHD

Justin Timberlake, Will Smith and 17 other celebs with ADD or ADHD