blog.1.image
Articles
Jan 25th, 2021

How Our Careers Affect Our Children

Founder
Founder

What working parent hasn’t felt guilty about missing soccer games and piano recitals? Almost two decades ago, though, researchers surveyed nearly 900 professionals about their relationships with their work and their children, and found that parents’ working, even for long hours, did not hurt children. What they did find was that parents who were distracted by, or obsessed with, their work, did see an impact on their children. This is likely only more problematic today when digital devices are omnipresent. The lesson: don’t worry about whether you attend every soccer game. But when you do show up, put your phone down and be there for your kid.

What working parent hasn’t felt guilty about missing soccer games and piano recitals? When there are last-minute schedule changes at work or required travel to a client site, it’s normal to worry that you’re somehow permanently scarring your little one.

See the original blog:

https://hbr.org/2018/11/how-our-careers-affect-our-children?utm_campaign=hbr&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&fbclid=IwAR0Ii1o8GVGUkQPy8Zpp8VfzSEY7ovmdB0_jFIHQwCgn-AGU-DFMtwtxzs0

More great articles

blog.5.image

How Company Culture Shapes Employee Motivation

In a recent strategy meeting we attended with the leaders of a Fortune-500 company, the word...

Read Story
blog.5.image

Is It Time to Let Employees Work from Anywhere?

While working from home (WFH) has become relatively commonplace, a new form of remote work is...

Read Story
blog.5.image

Nine professional skills that pay off forever

The further along you are in your career, the easier it is to fall back on the mistaken...

Read Story

Never miss a minute

Get great content to your inbox every week. No spam.
Only great content, we don’t share your email with third parties.
Icon