+1. Fortunately, this doesn't appear to be the norm in the Jewish UMC family I married into. The elderly are placed in care facilities if they can't afford in-home care. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I think the window for “grandparent help” is small these days…they have to be old enough not to be working FT yet young enough to be capable kwim?
In our case, my parents were still young enough to be working FT when my kids were small- and DH’s were quite elderly already and not up to helping care for small kids. Both sets of our parents had a lot of help- but the grandmothers did not work, and were younger. [/quote] Our parents have been great. Ours retired in their 60s (pensions), my mom at 58. They're in shape physically and mentally. Yes, we had our 1st when I was 27 so a teen mom by DC standards. My parents and in-laws are much more helpful and WANTING to be around than mine were, aside from 1 week in the summer.[/quote] You're lucky. We had twins at 30 but my parents were older and ILs still working. There were maybe 5 years where they could stay for a few days to help when the nanny was there during the day so DH and I could go away. Otherwise, it was just us and the nanny. Most of my friends didn't have parent help, either. It's ok--we didn't expect it. |
We are a nation of immigrants that left their home countries for freedom and better lives. My parents were on their own at a young age out of necessity, not selfishness. You have no guarantee that your DIL will want to live under your roof. Better have a Plan B. |
Less stress. Try it! |
It takes a village |
If your village is 70+ you screwed yourself per the article. Seems obvious. |
We are not a nation of immigrants--we are a nation of 2nd-son Englishmen who started a revolution and enslaved individuals who laud the foundation for the success and values of this country. Over the centuries, other have come to take advantage of this, which is fine, but a truth. American didn't start after the 1968 immigration laws. |