Anonymous wrote:Op here. Good to know I'm the unreasonable one. God I hate being an inlaw
Anonymous wrote:You're visiting them? Then really you should be the one adapting to their schedule, not the other way around. You sound like an ungracious guest.
Anonymous wrote:You're visiting them? Then really you should be the one adapting to their schedule, not the other way around. You sound like an ungracious guest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were more flexible. But thing I hear from you, OP, is that the world should revolve around you and the baby. I actually think that outside of DCUM you are a minority in not deviating from your routine. Maybe if you offered to compromise you could be more included.
Op here. Truly it's not time my schedule. It's the baby's. I have one at just loves to sleep at set times. Like I said, brunch at 11 would have worked.
Oh and making myself and baby food at someone's house is no fun. I too want to go out to eat.
Anonymous wrote:My inlaws love my baby and are nice people, but my MIL and my SILs control everything we do while there. Dh doesn't get a say even. All this was fine prekids. Now my kid wakes up at 7, is starving so Dh and I eat breakfast with him. No one else wakes until 9am, they're a little upset we didn't wait to eat. Ds goes down for a nap 9:30-11 and they go to brunch at 10. Because they eat so late they don't eat lunch, which obviously ds eats. They want dinner at 7pm while ds is asleep for the night. So everyone goes out while I stay home and this happens 2x a day.
They aren't adjusting their schedules to ds's but I'm sick of missing out on everything. Would it hurt them to eat breakfast at 8, lunch at noon and dinner at 5? They asked why he needs 2 naps and if he can stay up later since we're visiting (like I'm a bad mom for letting my kid sleep on time). Dh has offered to cook at home, but they want to go out to eat when they have guests instead of eating at home.
Anonymous wrote:This is why they invented hotels. You join the family when it works for you.
My mom is the queen of regimentation, but even she understood that we feed the kids at different times when they're small and that if we were going out to eat dinner, it was the early-bird special. For at-home grownup dinner, the kids got fed earlier and the grownups ate later.
Anonymous wrote:We were more flexible. But thing I hear from you, OP, is that the world should revolve around you and the baby. I actually think that outside of DCUM you are a minority in not deviating from your routine. Maybe if you offered to compromise you could be more included.
Anonymous wrote:We were more flexible. But thing I hear from you, OP, is that the world should revolve around you and the baby. I actually think that outside of DCUM you are a minority in not deviating from your routine. Maybe if you offered to compromise you could be more included.
Anonymous wrote:We were more flexible. But thing I hear from you, OP, is that the world should revolve around you and the baby. I actually think that outside of DCUM you are a minority in not deviating from your routine. Maybe if you offered to compromise you could be more included.