Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mom unsure about going back to class

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Ask Carolyn

Hi, Carolyn: I am a single mother of an infant daughter. I love my daughter more than life itself, but I am at a crossroads and she is in the middle. I work a very good, high-paying job. However, I don’t like it. I want to go back to school and get a master’s in a field I am passionate about. I’d get a job that would ultimately only pay about half of my current earnings, but I would actually enjoy it!

If my daughter wasn’t in the picture I would do this without hesitation. I can afford school and I know I could be successful at it.

But my daughter IS in the picture. Meaning I could not afford to stop working full time to go to school, and therefore would have to go to school in my offhours and weekends and I wouldn’t be able to spend any time with her. My parents wouldn’t say no if I asked them to watch her while I studied, but that is unfair to them because they already raised four kids, are retired, and want to pursue their own interests.

It’s not like I am complainin­g because I want to go out and party or anything like that … and I WANT to be with my daughter and not miss out on her childhood, but I want this, too.

Am I being selfish? Is it OK to be selfish in this case? Or should I just accept that as a parent I must make sacrifices and just stick with what I have got? – Selfish?

Selfishnes­s isn’t the first word that came to mind as I read this; I was thinking impatience.

You want what you want and you want it now — very human of you. But your quick calculatio­ns have already told you what this (relatively speaking) immediate gratificat­ion will cost you. It’ll require all of your best hours to go to working and studying and not to your baby.

I could keep going and parse some other points about your parents and fairness and the comparativ­e ease of doing this now versus when you have a toddler or older child, but, really — you have a baby you wouldn’t be able to see. That seems like something you accept only when you have no other choice.

You have choices, and not just the either-or you depicted here, the “fly free” or “stay chained evermore.” Beware of black-and-white thinking, by the way; when used to justify choices, it tends to be self-serving.

With a little imaginatio­n, planning and you can get your education in a way and on a schedule that doesn’t cost you and your baby so dearly.

Mainly, this means saving every loose penny from this generous employer until you have enough to launch, and researchin­g every means available of reducing the daily impact of this degree once you’re financiall­y armed to pursue it. There are so many variables to consider that I won’t bog us down in them, but they fit in those two boxes: degree-obtaining options (online, self-paced, parttime, etc.), and financial options (postponing, saving, part-time work, etc.).

Meaning, replace your yes/no, black/ white, with “not yet” and strategic, measured steps. See your daughter as your beacon for this journey, versus someone who stands in the way.

Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www .facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washington­post.com.

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Carolyn Hax

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