We're moving to the south soon. I had both kids in my forties - I'm totally expecting to get this. |
| Yup. Another young mom (for this area) with mixed kids. Kids look just like DH, which doesn't help. |
| Where I'm from, 29 is considered old for having a baby. Lots of people are grandparents by time they're in their late 30's. |
Totally. When I was 30 and didn't have kids yet people down there either really pitied me or thought something was wrong with me. |
Also, not a lot of people have nannies there. |
N Arlington. |
No, bit I have been mistaken for my children's grandparent. Premature gray hair. |
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Yes. I had my first at 25. |
| Yes. I am brown and they are white. I'm 34, that's relatively young for this area. |
| Believe it or not, my wife, an African-American, has never been (openly) mistaken for the nanny of our 8 year old who looks white, has green eyes and brown hair with blond highlights. We live in DC. Clearly there is something in the way she carries herself and interacts with dd that communicates a parent-child relationship. I'm sure there's some study that has been done on how parents vs caregivers interact with relation to subtle differences in eye contact, touch, tone of voice, etc. |
| it happened all the time when i was a nanny and it happens all the time now that i'm a mom. not sure what's the big deal... |
In a really slow voice ... "There are these things called genes ..." People are so stupid sometimes. |
| Never and I became a Mom at 25. My son also looks like my clone and I'm very hands on and affectionate with him. |
| Yep. I was 32 when I had my first but looked much younger. |
My dear PP, don't get too smug. People assume many things without telling you. You're just not subtle enough to pick up on them, or you've never been in a situation where you could gauge how people saw that relationship. I know I was mistaken for the nanny, even though no one actually told me this to my face, but I could tell easily by the attitude. |