Thanks for writing this! I’ve just returned to work after six months off with my first child (my wife took the first six months, I took the second, we live in the UK where luckily that’s a protected right), and have been finding it extremely challenging, so good to hear from people who made it work. My wife and I also share 50⁄50, and the ability to take shifts has certainly made it more viable (and I don’t mind the long Sunday walks with baby and dog while she works!)
I’d agree with a few comments highlighted—there are maybe a few people who spend their time totally optimally, but for me, having a kid mainly meant less time drinking and playing video games. The quality and quantity of my friendships has suffered, but that is largely down to a combination of me not making an appropriate effort to make friends during the time off, and being a man at baby activities.
The cost of childcare is indeed not cheap, but in the context of earning-to-give (which I do) it’s a relatively straightforward trade-off.
Agree with you re: overpopulation (that, and most readers are likely to live in areas where the total fertility rate is well under 2), and adoption—if anyone is considering adoption as an alternative to conception (assuming the latter is an option), please be sure you’ve looked into it—improvements in medicine mean there just aren’t that many healthy-but-parentless kids around these days. I was relatively neutral on the conception-vs-adoption topic (I tend to have the impulse to take care of every baby/dog/bird/sad person I pass by anyway), but I had a realistic think to myself about my ability and willingness to look after a severely disabled child by choice.
With regards to my feelings about effective altruism, if anything, my feelings have become stronger. I actually cried while listening to an interview on 80k hours regarding malaria and imagining my own child going through that, and separately, that the year 2100 has suddenly become a real year, rather than just an abstraction of the future; my daughter, right here, is likely to be alive then!
Thanks for writing this! I’ve just returned to work after six months off with my first child (my wife took the first six months, I took the second, we live in the UK where luckily that’s a protected right), and have been finding it extremely challenging, so good to hear from people who made it work. My wife and I also share 50⁄50, and the ability to take shifts has certainly made it more viable (and I don’t mind the long Sunday walks with baby and dog while she works!)
I’d agree with a few comments highlighted—there are maybe a few people who spend their time totally optimally, but for me, having a kid mainly meant less time drinking and playing video games. The quality and quantity of my friendships has suffered, but that is largely down to a combination of me not making an appropriate effort to make friends during the time off, and being a man at baby activities.
The cost of childcare is indeed not cheap, but in the context of earning-to-give (which I do) it’s a relatively straightforward trade-off.
Agree with you re: overpopulation (that, and most readers are likely to live in areas where the total fertility rate is well under 2), and adoption—if anyone is considering adoption as an alternative to conception (assuming the latter is an option), please be sure you’ve looked into it—improvements in medicine mean there just aren’t that many healthy-but-parentless kids around these days. I was relatively neutral on the conception-vs-adoption topic (I tend to have the impulse to take care of every baby/dog/bird/sad person I pass by anyway), but I had a realistic think to myself about my ability and willingness to look after a severely disabled child by choice.
With regards to my feelings about effective altruism, if anything, my feelings have become stronger. I actually cried while listening to an interview on 80k hours regarding malaria and imagining my own child going through that, and separately, that the year 2100 has suddenly become a real year, rather than just an abstraction of the future; my daughter, right here, is likely to be alive then!