Anonymous wrote:I do think this is too many rules and being too rigid about rules, BUT
I really agree with your first rule because this is something that people can be really unrealistic about. Both my mom and my MIL were incredibly demanding about wanting to hold the baby and would actually speak sharply to me when I asked to take the baby back. My MIL once accused me of feeding the baby "too often" just to have an excuse to take the baby back (baby was a month old! we were feeding at normal intervals). Both of them said to me at one point that it was "unfair" for me to ask to hold the baby because "you get to hold her all the time."
I just think it's really rude to tell a woman who is within that 6 week postpartum period that she can't hold her own baby. It's selfish and cruel. A woman who recently gave birth should get to hold her baby whenever she wants.
So I'd stick with that rule and I'd encourage your DH to back you up, if you think it will be an issue.
The other stuff is too much. It's fine to set some of those boundaries, but sending people a list that long will just make them feel like you hate them and don't want them to see the baby at all.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know of any places that offer RSV and flu screening tests. You could certainly request that visitors have a flu vaccine, but if you live in an apartment…you are surrounded by people not vaccinated by flu every time you are in an elevator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hotel sounds reasonable, everything else sounds like you are making up rules because you don’t really want them to come.
+1. It sounds like you’re stressed, don’t like DH’s family, and are trying to control everything. Let this go. Most people don’t want to kiss the baby on the face and post on social media. Just have the stay at a hotel and come for increments of time. And asking to take shoes off is reasonable.
Dude, have you met boomers, they trade social currency in FB posts about “their baby” (aka the grandkid). The amount of times I’ve had to remind my MIL to keep her crusty lips off my toddler’s face is too numerous to count.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hotel sounds reasonable, everything else sounds like you are making up rules because you don’t really want them to come.
+1. It sounds like you’re stressed, don’t like DH’s family, and are trying to control everything. Let this go. Most people don’t want to kiss the baby on the face and post on social media. Just have the stay at a hotel and come for increments of time. And asking to take shoes off is reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Hotel sounds reasonable, everything else sounds like you are making up rules because you don’t really want them to come.
Anonymous wrote:Reasonable: wait to have visitors, wash hands, sleep in a hotel, restrict kisses to the top of the head (if an active cold sore, no visit), shoes off in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Reasonable: wait to have visitors, wash hands, sleep in a hotel, restrict kisses to the top of the head (if an active cold sore, no visit), shoes off in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Your 70+ yr old inlaws sleep on air mattresses? ??