Anonymous wrote:Since your father only lives 2 hours away, go pick him up and bring him back to your house to stay with you for a week. No need to leave your baby for an entire week when he lives so close. This is sounding a little off. I mean this kindly OP, is it possible you are suffering from PPD and want to get away from your baby?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 8 weeks I would not do this. If YOU needed life-saving surgery I would do it, otherwise no. If somebody is dying, they are going to die. Your baby's life has JUST started. They don't have vaccines, they only have the immunity they got from being inside your baby and maybe if you've been nursing. Somebody else can help with the family emergency. You have to prioritize your newborn.
Sorry. I know this sounds harsh and isn't what you want to hear. But it's absolutely what I would do.
I agree with the PP. At eight weeks I’m bringing baby with me, and if it’s an emergency that can’t be handled with a baby in tow, then I am not equipped to help either. Unless one of my other children were in dire circumstances I can’t imagine it.
I agree. The baby would be coming with me, no question.
It's good that you all view the baby's fathers as equal parents.
FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Are you willing to give up breastfeeding and possibly have your baby not recognize you when you get back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd be taking baby with me too. Newborns need antibodies. If your baby has a fever and is <3 months old, they are supposed to go to the NICU. You should not be traveling. The safest way to travel is to at least give baby your antibodies.
What if the baby was exclusively formula-fed?
Anonymous wrote:You should not leave an 8 week old. Your husband can go take care of your father for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will do great!! You will miss them both, especially baby, but they will be perfectly fine together.
I would prepare for the possibility that baby may not want to nurse when you get back, and you’ll need to be extremely careful about COVID exposure.
OP here. It's just my dad and he lives in a rural area. His caretaker injured her back and will be out for a week. My dad is high risk and partially disabled. He needs help and I'm the only one that can help him since I can drive to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not leave a baby that young with a man. They dont have the instincts. They can sleep right through a baby crying in the middle of the night. They cant discern the different types of crying. They are prone to frustration.
Agree 100%. There is a biological reason women are more nurturing. It’s called oxytocin and it’s the hormone responsible for making new moms nurturing and attentive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not leave a baby that young with a man. They dont have the instincts. They can sleep right through a baby crying in the middle of the night. They cant discern the different types of crying. They are prone to frustration.
Agree 100%. There is a biological reason women are more nurturing. It’s called oxytocin and it’s the hormone responsible for making new moms nurturing and attentive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you women shock me. It's a week. OP will be gone for a week. it's not like she is leaving for a month. Men leave for a week on business trips and no one says anything. Her child needs his dad just as much as he needs his mom. Her husband sounds like a great dad who will be able to handle things for a week. No need to make OP feel bad.
True, but baby is breastfed. That’s the key difference. I wouldn’t leave a breastfed baby for a week. It would mess up my milk supply (pumping is just not the same) and as another PP mentioned, babies at that age greatly benefit from the antibodies in their mother’s beast milk. Now if OP’s baby was exclusively formula-fed, then there wouldn’t be an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you women shock me. It's a week. OP will be gone for a week. it's not like she is leaving for a month. Men leave for a week on business trips and no one says anything. Her child needs his dad just as much as he needs his mom. Her husband sounds like a great dad who will be able to handle things for a week. No need to make OP feel bad.
True, but baby is breastfed. That’s the key difference. I wouldn’t leave a breastfed baby for a week. It would mess up my milk supply (pumping is just not the same) and as another PP mentioned, babies at that age greatly benefit from the antibodies in their mother’s beast milk. Now if OP’s baby was exclusively formula-fed, then there wouldn’t be an issue.
Anonymous wrote:I would not leave a baby that young with a man. They dont have the instincts. They can sleep right through a baby crying in the middle of the night. They cant discern the different types of crying. They are prone to frustration.
Anonymous wrote:Some of you women shock me. It's a week. OP will be gone for a week. it's not like she is leaving for a month. Men leave for a week on business trips and no one says anything. Her child needs his dad just as much as he needs his mom. Her husband sounds like a great dad who will be able to handle things for a week. No need to make OP feel bad.
I am going to ask AGAIN OP- HAVE you talked to your pediatrician about whether you need to quarantine and/or get tested before you go back to your family? Has your MIL been quarantined and been tested or will get tested? Are you interviewing replacements remotely? Have you been tested prior to seeing your father?
This is not about your husband. This is about risk assessment. Please contact your ped to get the correct information and stop messing around with your kids life.