Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is going to sound like a weird piece of advice (and I only have one right now, so I can't even give personal experience) but we're planning on a bigger family (3-4 kids) and I've found a LOT of blogs with tips for large families. Warning: a lot of what you'll find is very conservative, religious types. But tons of helpful, practical tips, and the fact that they hate gay people doesn't ACTUALLY impact their logistical advice. I think that would get you a lot more helpful info than DCUM, which tends to veer quickly to "well it's not possible to care for 4 kids well" or "well, you just have to do it, being a mother is tough!!" which is... not my attitude.
Haha, I'm this poster and the two posts right above mine REALLY proved my point!
Anonymous wrote:OP here - on the book routine in particular i'm loathe to combine them always because its currently kind of a magical time with my oldest who is usually a tornado of activity but during evening books / cuddles, he calms down and has very thoughtful conversations that wouldn't be possible with a little sib competing for attention. I guess I can always rotate who gets individual time vs budded up when they get older.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire help
If you have unlimited resources, what is the full list of help you'd get? (just curious....i don't have unlimited resources, but do have some options for throwing some money at it to try to make this phase as enjoyable and fun as possible. i love love love the toddler stage and don't want it to just turn into a blur under a pile of exhaustion and chores)
To combat this, hire a maid to clean your house and do your laundry. I would also see if you can find one who would be a house manager of sorts, restocking pantry items and replenishing items like toilet paper, paper towels, hand soap, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Don't be afraid of using a playpen. My 4 yr old wanted to get in, occasionally, to get away from baby sister. The four year old *wanted* to play without getting bothered. Wanted to play with some toys alone, or they weren't age appropriate yet for the baby.
And the reverse. Sometimes you just need to put the baby somewhere safe. Safe while you attend to the 4 yr old.
Bet I'll get flamed for mentioning a play pen, but mentioning anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire help
If you have unlimited resources, what is the full list of help you'd get? (just curious....i don't have unlimited resources, but do have some options for throwing some money at it to try to make this phase as enjoyable and fun as possible. i love love love the toddler stage and don't want it to just turn into a blur under a pile of exhaustion and chores)
Anonymous wrote:I'm a mom of 4 kids that are each about 2 years apart, so I've had kids at those ages twice.
I guess I didn't worry to much about having books "tailored" to stages. The babies would enjoy the same books as the older kids at bedtime, and the older kids would enjoy re-hearing their baby favorites.
By the time my kids were 4 or so they were able to read some on their own, so it was also good to have the big kids read to the little kids sometimes.
And also, we'd read a lot at other times of day, not just bed time--so if there was a certain book that I felt was best for babies (like a board book) I'd just do that one with the baby while the older kids were at school or doing something else.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - on the book routine in particular i'm loathe to combine them always because its currently kind of a magical time with my oldest who is usually a tornado of activity but during evening books / cuddles, he calms down and has very thoughtful conversations that wouldn't be possible with a little sib competing for attention. I guess I can always rotate who gets individual time vs budded up when they get older.