mylittlepretties
Rough_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2012
- Messages
- 28
Hi, I am not a frequent poster but had been planning on venturing into this area of the forums in a couple of weeks to join the Pregnant PSers thread. I have read through many posts and I have been very impressed by the great advice that comes from the PS community. I am hoping you guys can send that great PS advice my way.
Just as some background, we are pregnant with our first and it has been a very long, hard journey to get to this point - really didn't think it would happen for us. I am still not completely registering that we are pregnant and we haven't told family or friends. We are being very very cautious and are waiting until after 18wks when we have the anatomy scan.
So, of course everything happens at once. A manager position opened up at my job and they rarely come up. My manager encouraged me to apply and I also got positive encouragement from others in my department. I have just finished the round of reviews but did not disclose that I am pregnant. I decided not to disclose this based on advice from my company's independent career center as well as from a colleague whose opinion I trust. I didn't want to put the interviewing committee and the hiring manager into a compromising position of having knowledge of my pregnancy and possibly letting that affect their decision.
The issue I am concerned about is that next year, a good number of people will be out as part of a company benefit where after certain number of years at the company, employees are given a several weeks of paid time off. I will be due around March and so will probably be out on maternity leave for 3-4 months. This is the main reason I was concerned about not disclosing my pregnancy during the interview because I would be out when there maybe less resources. However, I think that most will be out after I plan to be back from maternity.
I think I have a fair chance of getting the position, and am trying to figure out, if I get the offer, how best to divulge that I am pregnant. I of course would let them know at the time that I am given the offer (if I get it)! but not sure what to say and would really appreciate some advice on what to say if I get a chance to say "Yes" to the job.
Just as some background, we are pregnant with our first and it has been a very long, hard journey to get to this point - really didn't think it would happen for us. I am still not completely registering that we are pregnant and we haven't told family or friends. We are being very very cautious and are waiting until after 18wks when we have the anatomy scan.
So, of course everything happens at once. A manager position opened up at my job and they rarely come up. My manager encouraged me to apply and I also got positive encouragement from others in my department. I have just finished the round of reviews but did not disclose that I am pregnant. I decided not to disclose this based on advice from my company's independent career center as well as from a colleague whose opinion I trust. I didn't want to put the interviewing committee and the hiring manager into a compromising position of having knowledge of my pregnancy and possibly letting that affect their decision.
The issue I am concerned about is that next year, a good number of people will be out as part of a company benefit where after certain number of years at the company, employees are given a several weeks of paid time off. I will be due around March and so will probably be out on maternity leave for 3-4 months. This is the main reason I was concerned about not disclosing my pregnancy during the interview because I would be out when there maybe less resources. However, I think that most will be out after I plan to be back from maternity.
I think I have a fair chance of getting the position, and am trying to figure out, if I get the offer, how best to divulge that I am pregnant. I of course would let them know at the time that I am given the offer (if I get it)! but not sure what to say and would really appreciate some advice on what to say if I get a chance to say "Yes" to the job.