Why I quit my six-figure job to be a house husband-Father explains
A man has explained his decision behind quitting his high-powered, high-paying, technology gig to be a stay-at-home dad.
Anand Iyer, now three months in, tells Yahoo Parenting it’s the best investment he’s ever made..The 34-year-old's wife Shreya, 36, became the primary
breadwinner with her job managing recruiting for Splunk, a technology
company that does data analytics. “
Like all working parents who often struggle to balance career and
family, the San Francisco tech guru had just endured one too many nights
of rushing home only to find his 2-year-old daughter, Ava, already
asleep. He was missing too much and “felt terrible,”
“I wasn’t spending any time with
her in the evening,” says Iyer, noting that one conversation with a
fellow father really got him thinking. “We started talking about how
hard this was, being a working parent. My friend said, ‘My son is 2 months old
and I haven’t bonded with him yet.’ And I felt the same way. I started
to ask myself, ‘What am I working so hard for? Why are we trying to make
our lives so great but aren’t investing in time with our child?’”
So on January 23, the former Microsoft product manager, then chief
product officer at Threadflip, walked into his boss’ office and quit.
Iyer
announced that he’d decided to stay home and focus on spending quality
time with the toddler before it was “too late.
For
the sake of his little girl, that high power, six-figure gig he’d
climbed the ladder 15 years to score would have be on hold for a while.
And to his surprise, Iyer tells Yahoo Parenting, his boss applauded him
for it.
He told me, ‘I totally get it,My boss said, ‘You have to realize who
you’re working for.’ His words, not mine. He was very understanding. It
actually wasn’t a tough talk at all.” Colleagues followed suit.“I’ve had
occasional sleepless
nights over our finances, “But the reality is that I’m
fortunate that I’ve been working nonstop for a long time so it wasn’t as
difficult a transition for us financially as it could have been.
Instead of hurrying off to get to work each morning, “I look forward to
getting up every morning and feeding Ava,” he says. “And when I first
read that study about fathers being more happy the more time they spend
with their kids, I was like, ‘That’s totally right.’ I feel magnificent.
This experience has been so rewarding and I can see that Ava is
benefitting from it.”
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