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Traveling for work tough on parents, children

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His daughter, Lexi Turner, doesn’t know any other lifestyle.

When he’s home, the 14-year-old spends as much time with him as she can. When he’s away, she tries to talk to him at least once a day, if not through text messaging.

“It has been hard, but it is all I have ever known,” said Lexi Turner, a freshman at Crystal Lake South High School. “We are a tight-knit family, and when he is home, we are all together. The traveling almost makes it better because we are not always on top of each other and have space.”

She also credited her mother, who at times acts as a single mom.

“She is amazing,” Lexi Turner said. “My mom has to do everything when he is away.”

The Other Side

Jen Arendt is a stay-at-home mother of two whose husband has been traveling for work for more than a decade.

Her husband handles restoration work for areas and buildings that have water damage, such as from hurricanes or floods, or when sprinklers go off. He also helps provide temporary power and climate control.

The majority of his travel comes during emergency situations, such as when he was sent to New Jersey for two weeks after superstorm Sandy or to New Orleans for five weeks after Hurricane Katrina.

“We have a pretty good system down and take the good with the bad,” said Arendt, 40. “He understands and recognizes that it is more work for me, and I try and run things smoothly with the kids so that when he is on the road, he doesn’t have to stress out.”

When their children were younger, it was harder for the couple’s son and daughter to understand why daddy was gone so much, Arendt said. As they have gotten older, a series of rituals has helped them better understand.

Those consistencies include talking to them every morning and night when he is on the road, always bringing them home a souvenir or memento from where he has been, and using FaceTime, which is similar to Skype, to see their familiar faces.

“I’ve known my husband for 30 years and we know as a couple that this is what he does,” said Arendt, a Fox River Grove resident. “We support each other and try to explain to them that even though it is hard, this is how dad makes money.”


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