should I watch one grandchild for free?

Anonymous
I've been the DS and I didn't have any resentment. The logistics of being further away made it perfectly reasonable. I did tell my sibling they needed to be prepared to take time off or have backup care on Fridays so that our parents didn't feel like they couldn't travel on weekends. As the kids got older and our parents got older, it also became apparent that the logistics work the same for aging parent care. My sibling got the benefit of free childcare but they are also doing the bulk of the driving to appointments, etc now for our parents.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I would never watch any grandkid because I don't have the energy for it.

BUT, I am willing to pay for a nanny to come to my house and look after my grandkids, with DH and I supervising. After all, 2 of the 3 biggest cons of having a nanny are cost and supervision, and I would solve both.

If I was in the similar situation as OP (both ds and dd's children needed childcare and both kids were same age), then the nanny would take care of both babies with help from DH and I.


Very few nannies are going to take that job. Supervising grandparents? Total nightmare.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My adult daughter and son each are expecting this winter. I've agreed to watch my daughter's baby full time when she goes back to work as it's a fairly easy morning ride over to my house. My son and his wife live almost an hour away, so it was never even a question that I'd be able to watch their baby. They didn't ask me, but rather signed up with a daycare.

A friend made a comment that it wasn't fair that I'd be watching one baby for free while the other set of parents pays thousands a month. They can probably afford it more than my daughter and her husband can, and they haven't said anything to me, but now I'm wondering if I'm setting myself up for trouble and ideas of favoritism. Is there any way to make this fair? Should I even try?



Tell your "friend" to MYOB
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I love kids - have 3 and I would NEVER dream of being a full time caregiver to a baby or toddler. Absolutely not. Part time? Sure or for a few hours a day. E.g. kid goes to Montessori from 9 to 2 and I help in the AM and PM.

I think you'll be way in over your head and have no idea. You can't just not provide daycare when they rely on you.

That said, I would tell the other adult child that they can go on vacation and leave the kids with you. That would be fair ish trade.


These are you kids and its crazy you cannot raise them without a lot of help.


I'm not talking about my kids. I'm talking about me in 20+ years and their kids.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I love kids - have 3 and I would NEVER dream of being a full time caregiver to a baby or toddler. Absolutely not. Part time? Sure or for a few hours a day. E.g. kid goes to Montessori from 9 to 2 and I help in the AM and PM.

I think you'll be way in over your head and have no idea. You can't just not provide daycare when they rely on you.

That said, I would tell the other adult child that they can go on vacation and leave the kids with you. That would be fair ish trade.


These are you kids and its crazy you cannot raise them without a lot of help.


I'm not talking about my kids. I'm talking about me in 20+ years and their kids.


But, also, that providing childcare in this situation is a JOB. It's not a hobby.
Anonymous
As the thread demonstrates, some folks are bean counters who would feel like this situation is unfair, and some folks aren’t. You know your kids better than we do—do you think your son is a bean counter who would feel slighted by this situation?

I agree with those who say this is a big favor and could be harder than you think. My mom did watch our kid full time when she was a newborn, and it was harder for her than either of us anticipated. For second kid, there was still a strong desire to help, but we dropped to one day of grandma babysitting a week. I found the daycare to be a lot better than I had worried it would be.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:As the thread demonstrates, some folks are bean counters who would feel like this situation is unfair, and some folks aren’t. You know your kids better than we do—do you think your son is a bean counter who would feel slighted by this situation?

I agree with those who say this is a big favor and could be harder than you think. My mom did watch our kid full time when she was a newborn, and it was harder for her than either of us anticipated. For second kid, there was still a strong desire to help, but we dropped to one day of grandma babysitting a week. I found the daycare to be a lot better than I had worried it would be.


Plenty of posters have clearly described that it’s not about bean counting. It’s about putting in place a dynamic where a grandparent’s time and energy are so overwhelmingly monopolized by one grandchild- ie to the extent that it is their full time job- that the other grandchild and family end up becoming increasingly marginalized and distanced as a direct (if inadvertent) result.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would never watch any grandkid because I don't have the energy for it.

BUT, I am willing to pay for a nanny to come to my house and look after my grandkids, with DH and I supervising. After all, 2 of the 3 biggest cons of having a nanny are cost and supervision, and I would solve both.

If I was in the similar situation as OP (both ds and dd's children needed childcare and both kids were same age), then the nanny would take care of both babies with help from DH and I.


Very few nannies are going to take that job. Supervising grandparents? Total nightmare.


We have friends in our circle that have this exact arrangement for their grandkids. But, I can understand why it could be a nightmare for some.

Let's just say that we are from a different culture than the majority culture here and the nannies are also from the same culture as us. It just works for us.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I've been the DS and I didn't have any resentment. The logistics of being further away made it perfectly reasonable. I did tell my sibling they needed to be prepared to take time off or have backup care on Fridays so that our parents didn't feel like they couldn't travel on weekends. As the kids got older and our parents got older, it also became apparent that the logistics work the same for aging parent care. My sibling got the benefit of free childcare but they are also doing the bulk of the driving to appointments, etc now for our parents.


My parents moved near my sister while I was several states away. When they started regularly caring for her kids they stopped visiting us as frequently and I was disappointed about that. But I also recognized what PP said, my sister was going to take on all the elder care. Which she did, through my father's death and now our mom lives with her so she handles all the dt appointments, managing medications, finances, etc. In the long run it balances out.
Anonymous
Add me to the chorus of people who have been in your son’s position. My SIL is getting divorced and my ILs are supporting her, so there’s no resentment but we have seen them once since this arrangement began almost a year ago. We are all very worried about my SIL and the kids but if this goes on long term they will not have much relationship with our kids if any. This arrangement makes the other kids the priority, you will not have the freedom to see your son’s kids on a weekday as long as you are doing this. You will have to clear any vacation you take with your son’s family with your daughter. And you will be very very tired.

I would do this for the first year only. Unless you are very young and in great health you will not be up for 9 hours a day with a toddler. The grandparents I see watching 3 year olds look exhausted and default to handing them a phone A LOT. Daycare is actually pretty great for toddlers, especially if they don’t have a long day.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP again. I guess there's no easy answer to what may not even be a problem.


Why not give overnight care to the other grandkid once a year?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It’s usually the wife who decides and who knows if your DIL even wants you to watch the baby. Besides she has her own parents.


This is the typical boy mom thought. They always make sure they know that boys families come second to their daughters.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I've been the DS and I didn't have any resentment. The logistics of being further away made it perfectly reasonable. I did tell my sibling they needed to be prepared to take time off or have backup care on Fridays so that our parents didn't feel like they couldn't travel on weekends. As the kids got older and our parents got older, it also became apparent that the logistics work the same for aging parent care. My sibling got the benefit of free childcare but they are also doing the bulk of the driving to appointments, etc now for our parents.


My husband also thinks that his parents don’t need to do anything to help. He will ask my parents before he asks his to lift a finger.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What does your son say when you ask him if he's upset about the imbalance? It may be moot.

Alternatively, you could offer to help pay the daycare bill (all or in part).


No, no no! Unless you are rich.

This is apples to oranges. One grandkid lives 10 mins away, the other an hour. If the Son/DIL want grandma to watch their kids, they need to move closer to grandma, or drive the kids to grandma daily.

It's not grandma's job to pay for daycare
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Fair might mean watching grandkids for 9 days while parents go on vacation. Dh and I would do just about anything for my parents who give us this. It way more precious than daycare. Daycare is easy to get, overnight care is not.

I would also think that the local child will help you more. My grandparents watched my cousin who was local to them. My aunt helps me grandparents nonstop now.


We lived 2.5 hours from my parents when our kids were young. They grew up seeing G&G 2-3 weekends a month, and with them watching the kids for probably 2+ months total a year while we travelled/got away (husband travels a lot for work). Kids loved this, and are very close to their grandparents.
In return, we took G&G with us on several family vacations to places my parents would never have paid for themselves. Yes, they also watched the kids for a few dinners when we did that, but they loved it and didn't mind at all. They got multiple tropical vacations (including Hawaii for 21 days) and quality time with their grandkids. what more could you ask for.

It's easy to get away when you know the kids dont' really care that you are gone because G&G have arrived for 7-10 days.

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