If you've been working from home during the coronavirus health pandemic you are definitely going to be able to relate to this video one mother took showing just what it's like trying to work while raising kids. Every mom knows that working from home can have its challenges, but it can be even more difficult trying to balance that work with kids who are home full time and who can't seem to stop interrupting. Mothers around the country are doing all they can to try and enforce some set of boundaries for their kids while they're working, but as you can see from this video, that doesn't always work.

Genevieve Shaw Brown is a lifestyle editor for Good Morning America who recently documented what just 10 minutes of working from home looks like for her, and it is something that many working mothers can relate to. While on her daily morning conference call, Brown noted that "in the first six minutes I counted 11 questions from the three children. Then I gave up counting."

Brown writes that she's feeling what so many other working moms are feeling after almost four months of working from home, homeschooling as well as taking care of all the other responsibilities that come with being a mom. "I, like most working mothers I know, am at the end of my rope," she wrote. During one conference call, the mother of three noted that she was interrupted by her kids 27 times in just over 10 minutes.  "Sitting at my desk for hours -- or even just an hour -- of uninterrupted work seems like something that took place in another lifetime," she added.

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While Brown knows that she and her husband are lucky that they have jobs they can do from home, the reality of trying to work effectively from home with three children around can be daunting. "Working and being a full-time caretaker of three kids is near impossible," Brown admitted.

Brown's family has implemented a daily "family rest time," where her kids need to stay in their rooms for 90 minutes, and she has prioritized her own self-care by going for daily runs to help alleviate stress. "I found it helped -- not with the interruptions of course, but with the way I reacted to them," she wrote. "Do I lose my patience? Absolutely. But I know I have a much longer fuse if I've had time to recharge myself."

Many have commented on social media asking why her husband isn't helping in this situation, which is a valid question. Brown did mention that the majority of his work is done through conference calls so perhaps he isn't as available to the kids, or perhaps it's because the kids simply always tend to ask for mom when they need something. Others were sympathetic and could definitely relate to her plight of working from home with kids, especially kids who are almost four months into homeschooling who have been social distancing from their friends. One commented could definitely understand the frustrations writing, "Is there a margarita fund for this mom? We need to donate!!"

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