Anonymous wrote:Y'all, not doing elf on the shelf isn't a "shortcut"![]()
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Doing elf on the shelf and other BS like that is a way to make parenting a million times harder than it needs to be (which is already hard enough). Skipping that stuff isn't some kind of sneaky trick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll start -
No toddler music/gymboree classes
Wash sheets monthly
No elf on the shelf
+1 to all of these
Same (though sheets are every two weeks). Kids are 5 and 7. No after-school activities yet. Rarely do playdates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean that's a terrible example because the reason summer camp takes longer for me is not because I'm agonizing over camps or polling all my friends, but because camps fill instantly, my DD hated the camp I signed her up for last year, some camps don't go for all the weeks I need them and I have to cobble together, etc. But I guess if you have good availability, not a lot of cost constraints, and get on it early enough, it could take an hour.
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Yes.. The camps that I can afford FILL UP. The $600 a week one is easy to say "oh you'll go there all summer" but I am not paying that.
Anonymous wrote:I googled elf on a shelf and still don’t understand what this is…some sort of book?
Anonymous wrote:I mean that's a terrible example because the reason summer camp takes longer for me is not because I'm agonizing over camps or polling all my friends, but because camps fill instantly, my DD hated the camp I signed her up for last year, some camps don't go for all the weeks I need them and I have to cobble together, etc. But I guess if you have good availability, not a lot of cost constraints, and get on it early enough, it could take an hour.
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Anonymous wrote:Y'all, not doing elf on the shelf isn't a "shortcut"![]()
![]()
Doing elf on the shelf and other BS like that is a way to make parenting a million times harder than it needs to be (which is already hard enough). Skipping that stuff isn't some kind of sneaky trick.