Anonymous wrote:Child care is when you pay for day care, camps, schoo or a nanny/babysitter. Hire help.
To the parent of the 3 year old, they are 3. Be realistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it's been one week of summer vacation and at our beach house during a gap before my kids have camp. I've been off work to spend time with them and i feel terrible but - it has made me SO CRANKY. I keep thinking - they are growing up and this time is precious. But when i am actually trying to entertain them/ get them off ipads/ make food/ keep the house from being chaotic my stress levels are skyrocketing and I feel like one of those dogs who starts exhibiting concerning behavior bc they are locked in a cage. It's also been too hot to do a lot of activities I normally would to get them out of the house.
I feel awful about feeling like this. Why can't I just enjoy parenting?
Think about how they feel because you are making them miserable. They didn't ask to be here so patience. There are no gold stars for doing your job as a parent.
Anonymous wrote:it's been one week of summer vacation and at our beach house during a gap before my kids have camp. I've been off work to spend time with them and i feel terrible but - it has made me SO CRANKY. I keep thinking - they are growing up and this time is precious. But when i am actually trying to entertain them/ get them off ipads/ make food/ keep the house from being chaotic my stress levels are skyrocketing and I feel like one of those dogs who starts exhibiting concerning behavior bc they are locked in a cage. It's also been too hot to do a lot of activities I normally would to get them out of the house.
I feel awful about feeling like this. Why can't I just enjoy parenting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The idea of the “parent as child concierge” is very new, maybe 1990s. It is pretty damn annoying and it’s ok to acknowledge that.
I’m the SAHM and I actually don’t think it’s that. It’s not that we’re doing things for them all day long. Just doing the things, in a quiet beach house, would be pretty relaxing. It’s the respectful interaction all day long. Some parents in previous generations set up barriers for when their kids couldn’t interact with them, and sometimes they enforced that by yelling. We tend to respond respectfully to our kids all the time, which is exhausting because they are exhausting. It helps if you detatch a little, and it helps if you set firm boundaries for them about things like whining and pestering. My best approach to that is just to CALMLY ignore and say “I can’t hear you when you’re whining” or whatever. But you need to say it without getting upset.
They just do 20,000 things all day long that are super irritating. Superimpose their behaviors on an adult and you can see how you’d think the adult was insanely annoying. In a ten minute car ride yesterday my three year old:
1) asked to have her windows down in the 100 degree heat
2) repeated, poorly, my explanation oft why the driver gets to decide about the windows
3) counted, poorly, to 16 to show how old you have to be to get a drivers license
4) took her shoes off and asked for help getting them back
5) asked about snacks
6) asked for a toy we didn’t have with us
7) worried aloud that I had driven through a yellow light
8) requested really terrible music and sang along
So that’s an angel child on a lovely outing. Amazing three year old behavior, five stars. But if an adult coworker did all of that on a 10 minute car ride, you would tell everyone you saw that day how insane and annoying they are.
Anonymous wrote:The idea of the “parent as child concierge” is very new, maybe 1990s. It is pretty damn annoying and it’s ok to acknowledge that.
Anonymous wrote:We've done that type of beach vacation with young kids and honestly it's the least relaxing vacation we've had. You still have to do EVERYTHING that do you at home (all the cooking, meals, etc) + tons of laundry and trying to keep it somewhat clean and not totally sandy, etc. And you're doing it without your usual setup, kids are more dysregulated out of their usual environment, maybe less good at figuring out their usual activities/toys to play with.
We've taken a break from this type of vacation honestly. I'm sure many love it but for this age group it's a lot of work for parents (esp if you're not sharing the house with other friends, family etc to share the load).
Anonymous wrote:Op- yes to the above - it’s a ton of work, the kids don’t have friends round the corner, them having friends means inviting whole families which is more work, it’s a thousand degrees, everywhere they go they drop wet towels and wet shorts and scatter other detritus and every time I try to do anything someone comes and says ‘mooooommmmmy xyz grievance’
I have calmed down a little since the apex of the feeling but is still there
Anonymous wrote:Op- yes to the above - it’s a ton of work, the kids don’t have friends round the corner, them having friends means inviting whole families which is more work, it’s a thousand degrees, everywhere they go they drop wet towels and wet shorts and scatter other detritus and every time I try to do anything someone comes and says ‘mooooommmmmy xyz grievance’
I have calmed down a little since the apex of the feeling but is still there
Anonymous wrote:I’m a SAHM and I often feel like people underestimate how irritating children are. The re-entry from a break from them is hard. Like having a day to myself is really important but coming home from a day away and doing dinner and bedtime is still hard and kind of extra hard, because you go from no kids irritating you back to submersion.
It’s not their fault, even when they’re being awesome they’re just really annoying.