Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Family Relationships
Reply to "How to deal w/ family members who smoke"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP, apparently you posted something similar yesterday but I didn't see it. Please step back from the immediate emotion of "she reeks and she's touching my child." I get that entirely, as non-smoker who had a smoking mother. But you're overreacting. When our daughter was born, I asked the pediatrician what she thought: Should we limit visits at my mother's house? I knew my mom would never smoke in the same room as our child (and she never did.) The pediatrician replied: "I would not stop visiting a grandparent just because of this, as long as she isn't smoking around your child." My mom smoked either in her own bedroom only or outside her house when we visited. Yes, the house smelled of smoke but I noticed that as soon as our child was born, the house smelled much better whenever we came; she was cutting back and also cleaning more. When she came to visit us, she smoked outdoors only. She said she realized that smoking had killed off her sense of smell, and she said she likely could not smell smoke on herself, so she was always careful to ensure her clothes were clean when she was around our child. We never told her to do these things or gave her ultimatums -- she just did them. Yes, I could still smell smoke in my mother's hair at times (hair really does absorb smells and retains them, sometimes even after washing) and on her breath at times. But I would not trade all the time she had with my child for anything. I hope you can realize, first, that your SIL is addicted to nicotine and that's hard to break. Start from a position of a bit of understanding for her addiction. You mention that she moved from another state recently -- a move is stressful, and if she moved due to a divorce or break-up or job problem etc. -- more stress. That means more nicotine, for a smoker. That's not an excuse but it's an explanation for why she might not have even thought about not smoking at this time. Second, she's an adult, and while your husband (him, not you; it's his role, not yours) can kindly and lovingly tell her, "Hey, maybe now's the time to think about kicking the habit, sis; how can we help?" he and you cannot force another adult to stop. Third, you refer to "we don't ever want her to smoke around DD," but can you be objective enough to see how, in her mind, she isn't "smoking around DD"? She is going outside to smoke every single time, as you report it. Can you see how she interprets that as not smoking around her niece? I'd agree with that interpretation. If you want her to stop smoking anywhere on your property including your yard, your husband needs to tell her that and ask that she get her fix before she comes over. But then even if you ask her not to smoke anywhere on your property, you are going to object that she still smells of smoke when she comes to visit. Still -- Unless your daughter is burying her face in aunt's shirt when aunt picks her up, there really is not an issue here. The alternative is to ban your SIL from coming over at all until she kicks the habit. But what does that gain? An offended, upset and further stressed SIL, who likely might smoke more because she's stressed, and who will get defensive about her smoking and therefore be less likely to quit any time soon. If you feel "That's not my problem, I don't want her here at all while she is smoking anywhere at all, even her own home" -- then expect that you won't see her again. Why let this create a rift if she's never smoking around your child? If you want to ask aunt to wash her hands after smoking outside in your yard, then politely do that. She will forget at times. Will you be upset every single time or will you focus on the fact she's building a relationship with your child? It's not like she's forgetting and lighting up while she's indoors. It's interesting that you say "she only seems to do it around us." It only seems that way to you because it looms large for you right now, and I do understand why, having been there myself. [/quote] PP, your mom sounds great. it's such a pleasure to read about a family member being proactively thoughtful with a challenging situation. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics