Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sending your older kid to preschool and not attending Thanksgiving or Christmas is a hard sell. Pick a lane.
I had two winter babies (pre-pandemic) and took steps to avoid illness. I also didn’t attend Christmas with days-old babies. I’m a SAHM and my older child was turning 3 when my younger child was born. My older child wasn’t in preschool yet so the 3 of us were just…home.
This. You’re being inconsistent. It’d be like insisting on the best possible child safety car seat for your infant to ride in, and then putting it, and the baby, loose in the bed of a pickup. You’ve lost the plot and you’re acting emotionally.
Anonymous wrote:You and baby don’t have to go, OP. I can understand wanting to avoid the stress of travel. BUT your DH and older child should absolutely go as the family representatives to both the Thanksgiving dinner and the wedding. To prevent them from doing so is hypocritical.
Anonymous wrote:Even before the pandemic, my ped told me not to take my newborn into public. Not sure why it would be different now.
Anonymous wrote:Just because you want to send your kid to preschool doesn't mean you also have to attend one year's Thanksgiving get-together or a cousin's wedding. There's a false equivalency there. Preschool is for your kid's development and is presumably part of your childcare. Sure, your preschooler might get the newborn sick, but one could reasonably decide to assume that risk given the value obtained from sending the kid to preschool.
Anonymous wrote:Even before the pandemic, my ped told me not to take my newborn into public. Not sure why it would be different now.
Anonymous wrote:Either stay home or don't. But the baby will pick up everything the preschooler will bring home anyway, so it makes ittle sense to be selective. It's kinda like during Covid, people made excuses to do the things they wanted but avoid the ones they didn't.
That said, as someone who had a really tough recovery from my C-section, I wouldn't commit to attending anything for the first few weeks. There isn't enough focus on giving new moms a chance to recover from surgery.
Anonymous wrote:Sending your older kid to preschool and not attending Thanksgiving or Christmas is a hard sell. Pick a lane.
I had two winter babies (pre-pandemic) and took steps to avoid illness. I also didn’t attend Christmas with days-old babies. I’m a SAHM and my older child was turning 3 when my younger child was born. My older child wasn’t in preschool yet so the 3 of us were just…home.
Anonymous wrote:It's your preschooler who is definitely the one who is going to get the baby sick.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:you're not crazy and they're not crazy. I had my first in feb 2021 and my 2nd in feb 2023 and I brought him to two weddings in the first four months. it's all about what you want to do. if you're not comfortable, don't go.
.Anonymous wrote:Just because you want to send your kid to preschool doesn't mean you also have to attend one year's Thanksgiving get-together or a cousin's wedding. There's a false equivalency there. Preschool is for your kid's development and is presumably part of your childcare. Sure, your preschooler might get the newborn sick, but one could reasonably decide to assume that risk given the value obtained from sending the kid to preschool.