Then the injured one tends to the baby, and the able-bodied one takes the tree down. Or the able-bodied parent takes the tree down while the baby is sleeping. |
OP, people are bring harsh, but you should know that you are completely in the wrong here. You were rude to your friend and her friend, who were doing you a FAVOR - not invited guests to your home.
You should consider apologizing for your over-reaction about the cold germs, begging off as being a nervous FTM. If you don't want to apologize, then you should never mention it again, unless you want people to think you are insane. |
Bye Felecia!
Who asks a ton of people to take down your decorations ?? WTF!!!! |
Haha |
Y'all weird. |
+1. No one wants a sick person around her baby, but you handled it badly and were rude. All you had to do was smile and bring the baby to her room, away from the sickie. Besides, pretty sure that actively symptomatic people aren't contagious anymore - it's the days before. Which means that all those people you "invited" to do your housework could have been - and at this time of year probably were - carrying some sort of winter bug. |
OP, they were both rude. Your friend should know to clear it with you before bringing a friend to your house, and that person should not have come with a cold knowing there was a newborn in the house. But ultimately, the one most at fault is you! You do not invite people over with a newborn in the house, period. People are sometimes thoughtless and come in with all kinds of germs. Put away your own tree, next time. |
agree |
+1. LOL |
I actually need to vacuum and don't feel like it. Can I invite my friends over to do it? I have a kid. I didn't know having a child allows you to invite your your childless friends to do your chores for you. |
Haha I had a friend once do a "Christmas decorating party" when she was pregnant. Yeah she just wanted all of us to decorate her House for her. |
4). Put away your own Christmas decorations |
I don't get most of these comments. I feel privileged when a friend asks me for help. There's such social pressure to always appear so strong, pulled together, etc.. When someone asks for help, they're showing some vulnerability and trust.
Mutual help is a core part of friendship. Why are so many posters assuming imbalance based on this ONE incident? OP, your friend shouldn't have brought someone else without checking with you first but chalk that up to being childless and not knowing about the vulnerability of newborns during flu season. You could have handled it a little more graciously, but not a big deal. Brief apology to friend is good enough. |
Yes, those childless are so stupid. That's why the childful deem to reserve the manual labor as a special privilege for them. The guest was in OPs house for an hour with no overt symptoms of a cold. She had to tell OP that she had one. She was very unlikely to be contagious, but even though *gasp* !childless! she somehow knew enough that direct contact, even though asymptomatic AFTER a cold, was likely to be a potential risk and SAID SO. Helping a friend is a wonderful thing. Being summoned to help (with something that was a petty task to start with, but that's besides the point) because you are single and childless is a little less special. |
I love you! |