Anonymous wrote:OP here. Appreciate the feedback. We’re definitely doing an earlier bedtime, we’ll see if that helps.
For those of you saying “eliminate aftercare if you can” - how are people doing that? Serious question. Unless you have a stay at home parent, family nearby who can help, or the money for your own nanny indefinitely, what’s the other option? It seems like most people don’t have any of those things (including us - my mom is several states away). We dug into savings to afford 18 months of our own nanny for our two kids, after having done a nanny share for our first before #2 came along. We had to move back to a share for the youngest ASAP for financial reasons - keeping our own nanny would cost us an extra $3000 a month. After care is $400. That’s ENORMOUS savings. Is there some other option here I’m not seeing? We do both have pretty flexible jobs, but not flexible enough to leave at 3 every day, or even half the days. And I feel like we need to save our flexibility for the endless sick days I know are coming our way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have twins and one adjusted to school just fine and the other was like your child.
It was difficult for the first couple weeks, and all of a sudden the switch flipped. Your child will adjust soon and you'll forget all about this time until you see someone else post about it years from now.
May or may not happen. My child never adjusted and I regretted making him stick with it for so long.
100% chance that is a reflection on you and not your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public preschool + aftercare is often too much for some kids. It’s not at all unusual! We pulled our kid from a very well-regarded DCPS PK3 program for this reason. He was just really unhappy and they were not able to deal with the issues. He moved to a smaller daycare and was so much happier.
At a minimum consider if he really has to do aftercare?
They were not able to deal with the issues you created and enabled. For which you blame them. I weep for your kid's future teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Hard "NO!!!!" to everyone suggesting that you tell your mom she can watch the kid if it upsets her. That encourages and empowers her to get all up in your sh*t. She doesn't get a vote. She needs to be supportive or STFU. If you don't want her being passive aggressive then don't do it yourself. Be direct and set boundaries.
As for the kid, you and kid will be fine. Change is sometimes hard for little ones (and moms). Kid will cry until kid stops crying. Also, and I don't mean to be critical but rather constructive, based on your post you are contributing to the kid's issues. They need to feel supported and like this PK3 change is positive. Your concern and second guessing is most surely being observed and internalized by the kid. You need to learn to fake it. Not suggesting you dismiss your kid's concerns but you need to do what's best for them even if what is best scares them.
In short order this will all pass. Hang in.
Anonymous wrote:Public preschool + aftercare is often too much for some kids. It’s not at all unusual! We pulled our kid from a very well-regarded DCPS PK3 program for this reason. He was just really unhappy and they were not able to deal with the issues. He moved to a smaller daycare and was so much happier.
At a minimum consider if he really has to do aftercare?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have twins and one adjusted to school just fine and the other was like your child.
It was difficult for the first couple weeks, and all of a sudden the switch flipped. Your child will adjust soon and you'll forget all about this time until you see someone else post about it years from now.
May or may not happen. My child never adjusted and I regretted making him stick with it for so long.
Anonymous wrote:Aftercare is generally somewhat lower quality more group babysitting than school. A lack of structure at aftercare can be very tiring/stressful for younger children. That said, its only week 2 and its brand new and an adjustment for all of them (not just your child). Pick him up as early as you can work permitting. It will get lots better.
Anonymous wrote:I have twins and one adjusted to school just fine and the other was like your child.
It was difficult for the first couple weeks, and all of a sudden the switch flipped. Your child will adjust soon and you'll forget all about this time until you see someone else post about it years from now.