Anonymous wrote:Who are you awful parents on here making the hack-sharing parents feel bad? Go away! More tips, please, everyone else. Mine include- no helping with HW, very few if any play dates when they were little, never cleaned the car, sheets get washed about once/month or so. Cleaning a bathroom now means doing things with bleach wipes and nothing more. Baths twice a week is fine in the winter. One pair of nice shoes/one pair of sturdy sneakers per child. In the days of potty training, I would throw away anything too gross. I also felt pretty good about throwing away stray socks. No more hunting for a match for a 2$ old navy sock.
One hack I found out wasn’t so great was buying my two boys the same style of underpants. Trying to keep the L’s and the XL’s separate was insane. I ended up throwing them all away and starting over.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are little (4 and 1) so this will likely change as they get older. But:
- No seasonal house decorations unless it's the result of an activity we did to keep the kids busy (like pumpkin painting). I'm not spending my precious free time hanging christmas lights.
- Not volunteering to be the "room parent"
- Putting the older one in aftercare
- Doing playdates for the older one on the weekends as much as possible. The kids entertain each other, I can do other things during that time.
Anonymous wrote:-AFTERCARE. Boy will I be sad when we age out of this. Now you can do aftercare AND enrichment classes - win/win!
-I don't do any holiday decorating except gel clings (and a Christmas Tree)
-I never buy new clothes, just bags of hand me downs like PP said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll start -
No toddler music/gymboree classes
Wash sheets monthly
No elf on the shelf
Is this for everyone or just your kid?
Anonymous wrote:I'll start -
No toddler music/gymboree classes
Wash sheets monthly
No elf on the shelf
Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is why I chose to stay at home. Inkmow mot everyone has that choice but man every day so just a hurdle for people to clear. Considering cleaning my children and brushing their teeth something that is negotiable. Nope. That’s no way for me to live.
I work and bathe my kids and brush their teeth… the most neglected kids I see usually have SAHMs who spend their days at Target or Starbucks, the kids are carted around with an iPad for entertainment and they never get to go to camp or classes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine that - lazy parenting. How revolutionary. The smugness is astounding. Real race to the bottom in this thread.
I'm sorry, who here is being smug?
(hint: it's you)
This has been one of my favorite threads on DCUM for a few reasons:
1) realizing that some people GET OFF on making this as hard as possible because the WORST thing to be is "lazy." I'm so glad (honestly, not sarcastic) that you have this thread to make you feel superior. I mean, why on earth would you even click this thread otherwise? And then COMMENT when clearly no one on this thread wants to hear from you? You'd just be like "Oh, no, I'm not really the bare minimum type, nothing for me here" and move on. Glad we could help.
2) Everything else in DCUM, and a lot of parenting in general in the professional circles of DC, is insanely competitive. And competitive parenting SUCKS. A race to the bottom for once, in one thread, here on DCUM, is such a refreshing change of pace.
3) There are some damn good ideas on here. After reading this, I'm for sure never doing a goody bag.
4) It's good to sometimes feel like you're doing okay, and other people are cutting corners, too.
+1
The judgers probably assume that everyone around them is doing as much as they are, too. They want to believe that anyone not doing everything has dirty, miserable, uneducated kids with no friends. I think it scares them to think that there might be people with kids who are FINE but not working quite so hard.
Thus, the shaming.
Anonymous wrote:Imagine that - lazy parenting. How revolutionary. The smugness is astounding. Real race to the bottom in this thread.