Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not do this, OP. I'm not an uptight person, but this has all the red flags of a disaster. A funeral is not a movie where a crying screaming or talking toddler will be an annoyance that will be forgotten in a few days. You could ruin this funeral and your SIL and her family could rightfully very angry with you for years. My relatives discuss very minor things that happened at funerals and went wrong and pick them apart. Funerals are very expensive, and very solemn occasions in this country. This is just not appropriate. Find a babysitter or stay at the hotel with your child.
Your family sounds terrible.
Anonymous wrote:I'm really surprised at all the anti-kid responses here. If your child can sit through church, she can sit through a funeral. When my infant nephew died, I missed the church service because I spent the whole time outside chasing his then two year old brother around. When my grandpa died last year, my babysitter plans (a Facebook friend from HS tried to set me up with her niece) for the funeral mass fell through so I was there in the second row with my 4 month old and 22 month old DDs. We had books and a doll for the older one, and the baby slept on my mom the entire time. I was doing a reading, and knew that my older DD would freak out if when I got up to go up front, so I just took her with me and held her on one hip while I did the reading. It probably kept me from crying, and my grandmother and aunts and our priest loved that I did that.
Anonymous wrote:I would not do this, OP. I'm not an uptight person, but this has all the red flags of a disaster. A funeral is not a movie where a crying screaming or talking toddler will be an annoyance that will be forgotten in a few days. You could ruin this funeral and your SIL and her family could rightfully very angry with you for years. My relatives discuss very minor things that happened at funerals and went wrong and pick them apart. Funerals are very expensive, and very solemn occasions in this country. This is just not appropriate. Find a babysitter or stay at the hotel with your child.
Anonymous wrote:We were in OP's position (no sitter, no options) and brought DD (then 19m) out of town for a funeral. DH went to the service alone, but we all went to the wake the night before and the reception aftewards. Those are less serious, and to be honest I think that DD added a lot of levity to the situation. People seemed to enjoy the distraction, and even those who were really distraught over the loss said things like "boy does she look like her aunt" or "XX would have loved to see that dress" - which i like ot think brought them some happiness in their time of sorrow
that said, we always made sure we had an 'out' - DH had a ride home if we needed to leave because DD started melting down, acting up, etc. We also knew where the nearest McD's playplace was if extra energy needed to be burned up. Thankfully DD did well with her coloring books, the snacks that are always at those things, and all the attention