Anonymous wrote:Wow so many sensitive Gen X feelings on here!
1. Stop trolling the infant board giving us patronizing advice
2. Gen X politicians are most of the problem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend parenting?
You mean you hate being a parent.
Everything you listed is you BEING a parent on the days when you're responsible for the care of your kids.
Lol I’m responsible for my kids 24-7. You’re out to lunch. Because I have a nanny in my house when I’m working doesn’t mean the same thing as being in the office with the nanny at home. I basically have to manage her, my toddler’s schedule, my partner’s schedule (because we share a workspace and have limited space to do Zoom meetings with camera on) and deal with constant interruptions and screams in the background. Working like this is my only break. Going to the office used to be my break and I could do whatever I wanted in my day. Lunch, coffee, take a walk, go where I wanted. Utter freedom compared to this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend parenting?
You mean you hate being a parent.
Everything you listed is you BEING a parent on the days when you're responsible for the care of your kids.
Lol I’m responsible for my kids 24-7. You’re out to lunch. Because I have a nanny in my house when I’m working doesn’t mean the same thing as being in the office with the nanny at home. I basically have to manage her, my toddler’s schedule, my partner’s schedule (because we share a workspace and have limited space to do Zoom meetings with camera on) and deal with constant interruptions and screams in the background. Working like this is my only break. Going to the office used to be my break and I could do whatever I wanted in my day. Lunch, coffee, take a walk, go where I wanted. Utter freedom compared to this
You "have to?" Really? You wouldn't be managing her schedule if you were in the office, so don't do it now. Sounds like a lot of the stress in your life is self-inflicted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is so sad and indicative of how a lot of millennial parents feel about childrearing, including many in my orbit.
To the parents who complain about having to spend time with their young children: why did you decide to have children in the first place if you don't enjoy being around them? I'm genuinely curious.
Kids grow up so fast! Once they're 11 or 12, they no longer want to have anything to do with you. Enjoy your time together while you are still their world.
NP - parenting the last couple years isn't what parenting is supposed to be like! doing it alone in your house (maybe with a nanny) without mom friends and playdates and places to take your kids on weekends and the ability to have a babysitter to go out to dinner and family bbqs and visitors etc etc etc. Adults are made to spend endless hours alone with their kids and thats what the last couple years have been. I moved 2 years ago and have made exactly one friend b/c at school drop off we are expected to distance and shove our 3yos in the door, people have started going to play spaces again but no one is chatting etc. Weekends are miserable - not because i don't love my kids but because parenting in these isolated vacuums isn't normal!
Oh give me a break! My kids are middle schoolers now, so we had no pandemic when they were toddlers. We rarely socialized with friends on weekends unless it was a birthday party. It was our “family time” - we went on hikes, activities, museums, out to eat, explored town, puttered around at home, went to the park and library. Yeah certain things have been closed during the pandemic, but not so much anymore. Staying inside all the time IS depressing, but that’s a choice you make, certainly not a requirement.
Half the stuff you mentioned doing CANNOT BE DONE during the past few years. What don't you understand about that?
. It's really not that bad and there are upsides. I remember back in my 20s when I was single and had no kids and some weekends I'd feel so lonely because my friends were out of town or I had to work or I just didn't have any plans. At least now I always have plans and people I love to spend time with. That's really nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend parenting?
You mean you hate being a parent.
Everything you listed is you BEING a parent on the days when you're responsible for the care of your kids.
Lol I’m responsible for my kids 24-7. You’re out to lunch. Because I have a nanny in my house when I’m working doesn’t mean the same thing as being in the office with the nanny at home. I basically have to manage her, my toddler’s schedule, my partner’s schedule (because we share a workspace and have limited space to do Zoom meetings with camera on) and deal with constant interruptions and screams in the background. Working like this is my only break. Going to the office used to be my break and I could do whatever I wanted in my day. Lunch, coffee, take a walk, go where I wanted. Utter freedom compared to this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not that you don't like weekend parenting, it's that you don't like parenting, period.
This is such false binary, and thanks for pretending you know my feelings better than I do, internet stranger. I can dislike parenting sometimes and like it sometimes. I can vent about the difficulties of pandemic parenting for young kids and be burned out and exhausted and have no support and still love them and be a good parent. Being a good parent doesn’t mean you never get to complain. Parenting under 5s is hard. Some kids are much harder than others. We are all in a storm, some of us in yachts and some of us in row boats taking on water while we are trying to stay afloat. There’s no point in continuing this thread, some of you just have nothing better to do that throw stones.
Anonymous wrote:It's not that you don't like weekend parenting, it's that you don't like parenting, period.
Anonymous wrote:Weekend parenting?
You mean you hate being a parent.
Everything you listed is you BEING a parent on the days when you're responsible for the care of your kids.