Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my diet and I grew up to be slim, perfectly healthy (just had complete blood work done!) and a Division 1 athlete. I’m actually getting McNuggets for lunch. Live a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you paying her to watch your child? If she is essentially your employee, then you have every right to say what she can and can't do during that time.
If you don't pay her, then she is doing you a HUGE favor by providing you with childcare 2 days a week! Don't accept the favor, pay someone else to do it.
Very easy.
Op here. Yes, we are paying her, and she we pay MIL even though she rarely accepts payment. We often provide MIL with a spa day or a nice dinner when she refuses to take the pay or just uses it on DS. MIL is more understanding and agrees with our form of parenting. We are thinking of hiring a sitter ( DS will go into daycare in 2 months). We had to end this babysitting before when my mom thought it was okay to let him watch hours of tv at only 2 months old.
Anonymous wrote:Are you paying her to watch your child? If she is essentially your employee, then you have every right to say what she can and can't do during that time.
If you don't pay her, then she is doing you a HUGE favor by providing you with childcare 2 days a week! Don't accept the favor, pay someone else to do it.
Very easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your allegiance is now to your toddler, not your mother. Your mother should not be feeding him this junk food for many reasons, but chief among them is that it goes against your parenting wishes. Her explanation is basically that she doesn't agree with your parenting, and her way is fine. Sorry, mom, you just lost your right to look after your grandson.
+1. I'm generally of the opinion that when you're getting free childcare from family, you get what you pay for and are much likely to have to just take it or leave it when it comes to their decisions (within reason, obviously).
However, in this case, she is the one that was pushing for the time with your son, she's not doing you a favor, this is for her. So she needs to respect your parenting decisions and stop with the junk food.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your allegiance is now to your toddler, not your mother. Your mother should not be feeding him this junk food for many reasons, but chief among them is that it goes against your parenting wishes. Her explanation is basically that she doesn't agree with your parenting, and her way is fine. Sorry, mom, you just lost your right to look after your grandson.
+1. I'm generally of the opinion that when you're getting free childcare from family, you get what you pay for and are much likely to have to just take it or leave it when it comes to their decisions (within reason, obviously).
However, in this case, she is the one that was pushing for the time with your son, she's not doing you a favor, this is for her. So she needs to respect your parenting decisions and stop with the junk food.
Anonymous wrote:Your allegiance is now to your toddler, not your mother. Your mother should not be feeding him this junk food for many reasons, but chief among them is that it goes against your parenting wishes. Her explanation is basically that she doesn't agree with your parenting, and her way is fine. Sorry, mom, you just lost your right to look after your grandson.