Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you sound like a miserable misanthrope of a person. I can’t imagine not wanting to help a new mom. Maybe she imagines you will have a baby also soon and need help, who knows. But by all means, disabuse her of the notion that most fellow parents wouldn’t care about driving three blocks!!! Out of their way so their kid can ride to school with their friend. I would give zero thoughts about doing this, so I can’t help you. And I never ask for help myself. I just can’t fathom being this miserly. five minutes?!
Not OP but no. She is being taken advantage of.
Wholeheartedly agree with this!! OP, someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
Hard disagree. 5 minutes 3x a week? I’m not seeing the warm heart here. I would not even have to think about this, this is an automatic yes. It’s such a small thing for me and such an enormous help to another family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the friend should hire a part-time nanny to handle such things as picking up kids from school.
OP, this is a big responsibility that you now resent. Tell your friend that you no longer want this responsibility.
This. What’s wrong with hiring paid help? My college-age niece works as a nanny 3 mornings a week from 6-9. She wakes the kids up, gets them ready for school, takes them to school, and returns home to clean up the kitchen before going to her own classes. She is paid very well for this, which she loves.
We know there's a lot of pressure on people (especially women) to be helpful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
I don't get this way of thinking. People can say no, and should say no, when they don't want to do something. Doesn't that make everything in life much easier? No one is judged for asking. No one is judged for saying no.
How people ask matter. This family framed this as "if you take our son to school we don't have to wake up the baby 3x a week." This is a persuasion technique. No one wants to be the one saying "no-- you should wake up the baby." It's the reason those annoying people asking for donations on sidewalks will say stuff like "do you have a few moments for starving children?" Only more compelling because OP actually knows these people.
Yes, OP can still say no and it looks like probably she should have. But you can see even in the responses on here why she has a hard time doing so-- look at all the comments calling OP selfish or minimizing this favor as NBD. There's actually a lot of social pressure on OP to say yes.
That's why many of us do not ask for favors like this unless we are truly in a bind. We know there's a lot of pressure on people (especially women) to be helpful. But if I *did* ask for this favor I'd also be careful to frame it neutrally and not put a hand on the scale with a sob story. Personally I'd probably offer a specific or general reciprocation, either offering to handle school drop off other days or pickup some days or even just saying "we'd owe you-- if you ever want to drop DS with us for a few hours just let us know." But that's me.
Anonymous wrote:someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
I don't get this way of thinking. People can say no, and should say no, when they don't want to do something. Doesn't that make everything in life much easier? No one is judged for asking. No one is judged for saying no.
Anonymous wrote:someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
I don't get this way of thinking. People can say no, and should say no, when they don't want to do something. Doesn't that make everything in life much easier? No one is judged for asking. No one is judged for saying no.
Anonymous wrote:They are using you. Do you only have one kid? I have an only and this set up would piss me off because they are "making it work" with three kids by relying on both grandma to provide free childcare and you to do the school run since that would be hard for grandma. And it's not a temporary solution to a short-term bind. Like they aren't asking you to do this until they find a nanny who will be helping grandma out or until their toddler starts preschool in a few weeks. You are their permanent solution to the childcare problem of having three children but having jobs that make it hard for either of them to be around in the morning. They should have thought about this before having a third child instead of trying to lean on you.
We have famiily friends like this and I have learned to set firm boundaries with them. They often take the attitude of "well it's just so hard with three kids -- people need to help us out." But here's the think: I have an only even though I wanted another kid. But we have ZERO family help (like we didn't even have parents or family who could come help for a few weeks right after the baby was born). We realized after our first that there was such a narrow margin for error in our life and we didn't want to overextend with a second kid. So even though it was sad for me we stuck with our one [terrific] kid.
So yeah I don't have a lot of patience for people who have more kids leaning on me to solve their childcare conundrum. Especially not when they already have more family support than I do. I didn't stick to one kid so that I'd have the bandwidth to help some family with three and a live in grandparent bridge the childcare gap.
Also my experience is that there is no reciprocation in this scenario. People who set their lives up this way where they are always leaning on others for help are NEVER able to help you when you need it. You'll have a day where you need someone to pick up your son or watch him for a few hours and you'll ask them and they'll explain they'd love to but they can't because they have three kids and there's always some reason people with 3 kids can't do things.
So I'd politely let them know that you were happy to help for a while but it's actually a bit of a burden and you won't be able to do it any more.
someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
Anonymous wrote:Two working parents who have a bunch of kids despite inflexible work schedules are stupid and selfish. One spouse needs to get a flexible job or stay home, and the other needs to get a better paying job if they want to have a bunch of kids.
Most of us limit the number of kids we have and balance our work schedules so we can enjoy quality time with our families, not pick up the slack for over-breeders who gotta be at the office 8-6.