Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question really has nothing to do with whether it's a marketing ploy or not. The question is: how can you accommodate the needs of your other children with a medically fragile child?
The answer needs to be: you find a way. If you are too worried about DH's ability to manage care, you need to work on it. You have 7 months. Train DH, hire an aid. Practice on a weekend. You need to be able to help your other kids when they need it too.
I think this is the bigger question. Today it's this Disney trip, but tomorrow it will be something else. Siblings of children with high needs have spoken eloquently on this board about the frustration/resentment they felt as again (spilling over to this day) at ALWAYS having the other kids come first, and never feel like parents focused on them. This is not to throw stones at you, OP--I can imagine how challenging things are for you. I'm just saying that you are going to need to put some effort into figuring out strategies that will serve ALL your children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Also, I make all the meds myself, and while I can show dh, I am afraid he could make a mistake - they are really complicated.
I just have to say -- shouldn't you BOTH know how to make your child's medications?
There seems to be more at issue here than logistics over DD's disney trip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question really has nothing to do with whether it's a marketing ploy or not. The question is: how can you accommodate the needs of your other children with a medically fragile child?
The answer needs to be: you find a way. If you are too worried about DH's ability to manage care, you need to work on it. You have 7 months. Train DH, hire an aid. Practice on a weekend. You need to be able to help your other kids when they need it too.
I think this is the bigger question. Today it's this Disney trip, but tomorrow it will be something else. Siblings of children with high needs have spoken eloquently on this board about the frustration/resentment they felt as again (spilling over to this day) at ALWAYS having the other kids come first, and never feel like parents focused on them. This is not to throw stones at you, OP--I can imagine how challenging things are for you. I'm just saying that you are going to need to put some effort into figuring out strategies that will serve ALL your children.
Anonymous wrote:The question really has nothing to do with whether it's a marketing ploy or not. The question is: how can you accommodate the needs of your other children with a medically fragile child?
The answer needs to be: you find a way. If you are too worried about DH's ability to manage care, you need to work on it. You have 7 months. Train DH, hire an aid. Practice on a weekend. You need to be able to help your other kids when they need it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 8, I would have fretted about her not going and jumped through serious hoops to make sure she was there even setting up situations that weren't necessarily logical or well planned. Now that my DD is a few years older, I can look back and say that I should not have worried about those opportunities and options back when she was 8. In the years between 8 and 13, it turned out there were several more "once in a lifetime" opportunities that presented themselves and I realized there will always be such opportunities. Some we did take advantage of when she was younger she hardly remembers or they turned out to be no big deal. In your situation, I would just turn down the opportunity and tell her you are sorry.
You know, while on the one hand, I agree with the basics of this sentiment, on the other hand I feel for this 8 year old, the younger sibling of a medically fragile child with a (self admitted) controlling mother. When does this girl get the spotlight or to have fun? When will this 8 year old get to experience Disney?
OP, i wonder if your (self admitted!) control tendencies freaked out the grandparents on the allergy thing. Disney is good with allergies.
This trip is more than half a year off - can't you figure out a way to let this happen? Hire help for yourself and send your DH off with her (with oldest child, too?). Speak warmly to grandparents about the allergy - confidently assert this sis something they can easily handle. Something to give your kids a break from always working around your ill child. Heck, entire family go - just GO - and work around ill child while there - Disney will help you.
Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 8, I would have fretted about her not going and jumped through serious hoops to make sure she was there even setting up situations that weren't necessarily logical or well planned. Now that my DD is a few years older, I can look back and say that I should not have worried about those opportunities and options back when she was 8. In the years between 8 and 13, it turned out there were several more "once in a lifetime" opportunities that presented themselves and I realized there will always be such opportunities. Some we did take advantage of when she was younger she hardly remembers or they turned out to be no big deal. In your situation, I would just turn down the opportunity and tell her you are sorry.
Anonymous wrote: Also, I make all the meds myself, and while I can show dh, I am afraid he could make a mistake - they are really complicated.