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Leaving the family guilt?

Joined
Mar 21, 2004
Messages
1,508
Location
Urbana, IL
Chasers with families/kids - how do you deal with the guilt of leaving the family behind for a week or two to chase cool looking clouds? Maybe you don't struggle with it, I don't know. But more and more as the kid gets older and responsibilities grow back at the house I find myself associating some guilt leading up to the annual 7-10 day chase trip, leaving things behind to a wife that's had some health issues lately. I want to channel that guilt back into excitement and wondered what kind of fun things other folks might do with/for their families before and during the chase to keep things kosher back at the homestead while we're out having a blast.
 
I just simply waited to get married until I was in my 50's. Chasing does have priorities.o_O

Seriously, chasing is just another form of blowing off steam and relaxing for many people. Just like fishing, bowling, camping, etc. Maybe explain that time off chasing is a good thing, which it is.
 
Well, you could be a jerk at home so they’ll be glad you are gone, but there are better ways. Every relationship is different and a broad brush can’t cover them all. I feel that your family being able to trust you and you being able to trust them make all the difference in the world. The trust I talk about isn’t necessarily that you aren’t going to go out and cheat on your wife, but that you’re gonna chase safely and come back in one piece. If your family has a reason not to have confidence in that, it’s a problem.
I can’t remember the last mother’s day I was home for. My wife and kids are OK with that because I spend extra time with them before and after chasing. And they trust me....
 
I sometimes have work trips that long, so being away isn't that strange. For this time, I asked my wife to have her parents come down while I'm away (they do every 2-3 months for a week), so the kids are young enough to be excited and distracted by them, and she gets some help. Also arranged family friends nearby to arrange playdates, etc. - all so they have other stuff going on, and miss me less in the usual day-to-day.

I'm also starting to try to find ways to share my enthusiasm with them; they have their hobbies and interests, and I'm not going to hide from that I do, why I like them, and enthuse. It should help them relate to their own, and just maybe, they might show an interest in mine. I also do that with stargazing, flying, cycling, etc. Some they are interested in, some they aren't.
 
Andrew, great question/topic!

You didn’t mention how old your kids are. That makes a huge difference in how much of a burden falls on your wife, versus how self-sufficient they are.

I usually feel a little guilty before I leave, and even as I pull out of my driveway to head to the airport. But I know that feeling is soon going to be erased by the excitement of being on the Plains and under a wall cloud.

My kids are now 10 and 14. It’s easier now than when they were younger. I had some years of shorter trips back then, and like Damian I would encourage my wife to have her parents visit for at least one of the two weeks I was away.

Even when I’m home, my wife handles most of the load with the kids anyway. I work a lot, so I’m focused on business and she’s focused on the homestead. We’re really only losing a couple hours a night on the weekdays; the weekends are the only tough part, and my chase trips usually only span two or at most three weekends anyway. I also travel some for work. So it’s not like a ton extra shifts to her when I’m gone chasing compared to normal life. Of course, it still makes a difference to her to not have any help or adult company. But she is still supportive of my chasing (20 years now) and I am grateful for that. Hopefully your wife is equally supportive. And if she is, don’t feel guilty, just show her how much you appreciate her support, and do special things for her when you’re back, whether that’s taking her away on a little vacation, or letting her go away with her friends while you hold down the fort back home, or just being in the moment for some quality family time.

I remind myself - and my family if necessary - that I am only gone for a lousy two weeks out of 52, which is less than 4% of the year. I am home with them the other 50 weeks / 96%. I also remind myself that it is healthy to have a personal passion, to not lose the “I” in the “we”, that adults have dreams and passions too, and it’s good for the kids to see that; it may inspire them to find a pursuit of their own, even if it’s not chasing. You know how on a plane, they tell you in an emergency to put your own oxygen mask on first, so that you can then take care of your kids? Well you have to have something of your own that makes you *you*, that fulfills you and makes you feel alive in order to be a good husband and father. Not everyone has a passion for chasing, or for *anything* for that matter. That’s a sad thing. If you are blessed with a passion like this, but don’t pursue or fulfill it, you are not going to feel complete and that will adversely affect you as a person, as a father and as a husband.

This doesn’t mean to be selfish or self-indulgent. You have to put your family first, and if unfortunately your wife has health problems then you may have to sacrifice chasing. But if there is no logical reason you need to remain home, then self-inflicted guilt alone is not enough of a reason to give up chasing.

One thing I do try to do is this. Let’s say I’m supposed to leave on a Saturday, if it looks pretty likely that no severe weather is in the cards for that weekend, I will delay leaving until Monday so that I can be with the family for the weekend. But once Monday comes, I leave; like I said, I’m just not around much on the weekdays with work anyway.

Also, if things are dead on the Plains, I come home early. If I am at the end of my first week, and week two has nothing going on, I do feel guilty about staying out on the Plains for no reason; I feel like I am just jerking around, and I feel guilty not just about my family but about my job. So if there’s no good reason to stay out there, I go home. I tell my wife ahead of time, I’m setting aside two weeks, but if nothing is going on I’ll be back sooner. More often than not, I’ll end up coming back after 7-10 days; rarely are there so many opportunities to chase that I just *have* to stay out there 14 straight days. If I am supposed to come home on Sunday, but Friday and Saturday look marginal, I will go home in time to spend the weekend with my family before heading to work on Monday. I realize it may not be affordable for everyone, but I will even come home and go back out to the Plains, if it looks like an extended down period that includes a weekend.

One thing that is worse than being away chasing is coming home but acting like you wish you were still away. I have been guilty of this because I have trouble with the transition from the “volume 11” lifestyle of chasing and the freedom of the open road, and coming down off that high to the “volume 5” of daily life. That’s something to be wary of. It’s a tough mental adjustment that I started a thread about here on ST a couple years ago. Even if you have to fake it while your mind is still on the Plains, let your wife and kids know you love them, missed them, and appreciate their support of your avocation.
 
Good point James. My wife knows when I wish I was on the Plains, that sixth sense! When deciding to skip the chase, stick with it. One Memorial Day weekend looked conditional in the Plains; but, the North Carolina mountains were going to be cool as Colorado. (East trough is a another discussion, lol.) We went to NC and had a wonderful family time. Even used the fire place!

My daughter is early elementary school age, so she misses me when I leave. However I promise her a Plains souvenir and she gives me permission to chase. You have to get permission from a Princess, lol! One year I found a plush Jayhawk toy and she still loves it!

Another year we got caught racing a supercell, and got pounded by the hail core. It was then, shortly after becoming a parent, that I really backed off my aggressive chasing. Even with data and tech. a few miles away is just as thrilling. When I came home from that trip she gave me this strong bear hug, almost like she sensed something. The plush Jayhawk year was better, lol!

Getting serious, I actually talked to my church men's group about it. Are we selfish mid-life teenagers or real men? Welp. In moderation hobbies and trips are healthy. Women should take weekend trips with the girls too. Though men seem to take trips more. We go to concerts or sports games. Some guys fish, hike, camp or hunt. We hunt tornadoes! Storm chasing trips are moral and fair.

Trust is not an issue for us, but wives do like us around. Just stay focused on the mission. We are out there to enjoy nature, forecast weather, and chase storms. I also visit old friends in Kansas. While some guilt means we care, it is healthy to get excited and have fun!
 
Just reading through this post I realize that I am very lucky, most of the chasers I know never got to start chasing until after college. I first started chasing storms with my dad at the age of 14, my dad didn't know anything about storms and I had passed all of the spotter network tests by age 13 and also had attended several spotter classes. So I told my dad where to go, and here I am at 19 and I've seen close to a dozen tornadoes. The best part is I am in college and the biggest thing I have to worry about is gas money. So yeah I am lucky
 
Just reading through this post I realize that I am very lucky, most of the chasers I know never got to start chasing until after college. I first started chasing storms with my dad at the age of 14, my dad didn't know anything about storms and I had passed all of the spotter network tests by age 13 and also had attended several spotter classes. So I told my dad where to go, and here I am at 19 and I've seen close to a dozen tornadoes. The best part is I am in college and the biggest thing I have to worry about is gas money. So yeah I am lucky


In my case, 8 years after college - I was nearly 30 when I went on my first chasing trip, despite a lifelong interest in weather. If you live on the Plains you can start early in life, but I had to wait until I had the financial means to make such a trip from the east coast (also, once I got married, I had to make sure I could afford it without it being my only vacation, which wouldn’t have been fair to my wife). If you are already chasing when you meet your future wife, at least she knows what she’s getting into, and you can agree up front that your chasing is part of the deal.



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Good point James. My wife knows when I wish I was on the Plains, that sixth sense! When deciding to skip the chase, stick with it. One Memorial Day weekend looked conditional in the Plains; but, the North Carolina mountains were going to be cool as Colorado. (East trough is a another discussion, lol.) We went to NC and had a wonderful family time. Even used the fire place!

My daughter is early elementary school age, so she misses me when I leave. However I promise her a Plains souvenir and she gives me permission to chase. You have to get permission from a Princess, lol! One year I found a plush Jayhawk toy and she still loves it!

Another year we got caught racing a supercell, and got pounded by the hail core. It was then, shortly after becoming a parent, that I really backed off my aggressive chasing. Even with data and tech. a few miles away is just as thrilling. When I came home from that trip she gave me this strong bear hug, almost like she sensed something. The plush Jayhawk year was better, lol!

Getting serious, I actually talked to my church men's group about it. Are we selfish mid-life teenagers or real men? Welp. In moderation hobbies and trips are healthy. Women should take weekend trips with the girls too. Though men seem to take trips more. We go to concerts or sports games. Some guys fish, hike, camp or hunt. We hunt tornadoes! Storm chasing trips are moral and fair.

Trust is not an issue for us, but wives do like us around. Just stay focused on the mission. We are out there to enjoy nature, forecast weather, and chase storms. I also visit old friends in Kansas. While some guilt means we care, it is healthy to get excited and have fun!


Jeff, as a Christian I appreciate you sharing the perspective you gained from your men’s group at church and am happy to hear that it is not just a selfish pursuit. Of course, anything can be taken to an extreme, but like you said, all things in moderation - and surely 2 weeks out of 52 is well below the moderation threshold [emoji12]

Another thing to consider when it comes to “guilt” is not necessarily the total amount of time but also how disruptive you allow it to be. You might just go on one chase this year, but if that ends up being your only opportunity and you feel so entitled to optimize it that you blow off a family wedding that your wife wanted you to attend with her, that’s a problem...

On a related note, I do feel guilty about missing a particular family event this year - my daughters being in their first real play that they have been preparing for over the past six months in a dance and performance arts group they are in. But my wife and kids knew up front that the play fell when I expected to be away storm chasing and that I would not be there, so it’s not like I am disappointing them at the last minute by bailing out. And I certainly don’t feel like a bad father for not being there when I am the one providing for them to pay for the program to begin with. But I still feel bad, especially since I kind of screwed up, the play is on a Sunday and as I noted in an earlier post above I would normally delay my chasing departure until Monday anyway IF there are no storms expected that first weekend of the scheduled trip. But I failed to think of this and didn’t order myself a ticket. It would have been worth buying the ticket just in case, even if I end up not using it, but it’s probably too late now... [emoji17]



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