Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
HAHAHAHAHA. No. You're missing PP's point. We're not doing daycare to socialize our children, we're doing it out of desperation. Anyway....
We've had three outdoor, fully masked playdates with a family whose only child is in my child's preschool class and who we are confident are being as cautious as we are (both parents work from home, groceries and food delivered, no other socialization, etc.). That is far less than the families we know who have a nanny or SAHM and are heading out to pumpkin farms, apple orchards with groups every week and weekend. Frankly, we don't have time for socialization!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
This is a little unfair. We are sending a kid to day care because we can't keep up with work and this is no longer a short term thing our employers are giving lots of leeway for. That means LESS seeing anyone we actually want to see, like the grandparents, because we would be introducing too much risk. We're not "ok with day care" because we're careless, we are because the alternative is one of us leaving the workforce. That's a pretty huge deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
I don't think you can conclude that families using daycare are already socializing. Lots of people do daycare to be able to work and could be as careful as others in other settings.
Having said that, I do think that you just have to accept the risk as part of daycare. Keeping out for a week or two after Thanksgiving will probably cause more difficulties for you than it is worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
+1
Families that are ok with daycare are likely already socializing. It is just not advertised like the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.
Anonymous wrote:You either keep her home or accept that is the risk of child care.