I’m Not Going to Be My Stepson’s Babysitter Just Because I Work Remotely

People
2 hours ago
I’m Not Going to Be My Stepson’s Babysitter Just Because I Work Remotely

Working from home has reshaped how we think about work—life balance, often blurring the line between job duties and personal responsibilities. Protecting that boundary takes understanding and shared respect, otherwise a home office can easily be mistaken for a backup plan for chores or full-time childcare. When one partner assumes the other’s career can be paused or sidelined for household convenience, it creates an emotional and professional imbalance that may grow into frustration, exhaustion, and long-term resentment.

Here’s Zoey’s letter:

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Hi Now I’ve Seen Everything!

I never expected to feel like the “bad guy” in my own marriage, yet here we are — and honestly, I don’t regret my decision.

My husband’s 5-year-old son, Kyle, is a kind, sensitive kid who lost his mom 3 years ago. Until recently, he was enrolled in a wonderful daycare while both my husband and I worked full-time. But last month, I landed a senior-level remote job — a big career step for me.

The second I accepted the offer, my husband’s tone changed. “Perfect! That means we won’t need daycare anymore!” he said. I tried to explain that working from home is still working, with nonstop meetings and serious responsibilities. He brushed it off, saying Kyle needed a “healthy environment with a real parent” and added that I’d “just be on my laptop anyway.”

At that point, I realized he wasn’t hearing me — or respecting my boundaries. I stopped arguing. But I also didn’t pull Kyle out of childcare. I simply made a different arrangement.

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Yesterday, my husband came home early and was shocked to find Kyle at the kitchen table, happily coloring with a professional babysitter I hired using our joint account. He was livid, accusing me of wasting money while I was “right there in the next room.” He says I’m being heartless toward a child who’s already lost his mother. I see it differently — I’m protecting my career and my ability to do my job well.

So tell me — was I wrong to arrange help without his approval, or is he wrong for expecting me to juggle a full-time job and full-time childcare at the same time?

Regards,
Zoey.

Advice from our editorial

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Zoey, we hear you — and your frustration makes complete sense. Trying to build a career while someone keeps redefining your role at home is exhausting. You’re not wrong for wanting your work to be taken seriously. Here’s our perspective on how you might handle this with both empathy and clear, firm boundaries:

  • Childcare is an investment, not a “waste”: Kyle deserves 100% of an adult’s attention. Giving him 10% of yours while you’re distracted by emails isn’t providing a "healthy environment"—it’s neglecting both the child and your job. By hiring a sitter, you actually showed compassion for Kyle’s needs by ensuring he was engaged and safe while you worked.
  • Make the invisible visible: Many people who’ve never worked remotely truly don’t grasp how demanding it is. Walk him through a typical workday: meetings, deadlines, expectations, and what happens if performance slips. When the impact becomes concrete (missed promotions, job loss, financial strain), it’s harder to dismiss.
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  • The joint account conflict: While hiring someone “behind his back” feels sneaky, it was a reaction to his refusing to hear your “No.” To fix this, we suggest a formal “Household Business Meeting.” Show him your meeting schedule and your KPIs. Make it clear: the sitter is a non-negotiable business expense of your home office.
  • Reclaim your space: If you haven’t already, ensure your office has a door that stays closed. This physical boundary helps both Kyle and your husband visualize that you are “at work.”
  • Address the emotional blackmail: It was unfair of your husband to use Kyle’s status as a “motherless child” to guilt-trip you. Your role as a stepmother is to love and support him, not to be a sacrifice for your husband’s financial convenience. A “real parent” knows when they need backup to ensure the child is well-cared for.
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You didn’t do anything wrong by making sure you could perform your job properly. You were standing up for your right to have your career treated with the same respect as anyone else’s.

Take a look at our other article sharing another reader’s experience of standing her ground against her stepson’s disrespect, which led to unexpected consequences.

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