Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how do you know the nanny asked to take the baby out and she said no? Just wondering where you’re getting your info and if it’s possible that it might be incorrect.
She told me herself. I asked how the nanny was going etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how do you know the nanny asked to take the baby out and she said no? Just wondering where you’re getting your info and if it’s possible that it might be incorrect.
She told me herself. I asked how the nanny was going etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP, how do you know the nanny asked to take the baby out and she said no? Just wondering where you’re getting your info and if it’s possible that it might be incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:OP back with updates.
Spoiler alert- no one is allowed, still, to hold the baby.
I offered up a lovely mother's day celebration for my sister- since this is her first. She said she would come for an outdoor visit, only if everyone masked (yet she wears a crappy cloth mask), for 15 minutes.
Okie.
So we did that, to accomodate her, and then the rest of the family enjoyed a lovely lunch at our parents' house.
Baby is 6 months, healthy, robust, sleeping well, and has had no interaction longer than 15 min with anyone except for the new nanny and my sister and her husband.
New nanny asked about going for walks, taking baby to playground, music mommy and me type classes. My sister said no to all.
Baby spends every day inside the house. Outings and contact with the outside world is to the pediatrician.
We are honestly over it and have had so many lovely family dinners and celebrated birthdays together- making up for 2 years of lost time. My sister and unfortunately her baby are missing out. But that is her choice.
Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back with updates.
Spoiler alert- no one is allowed, still, to hold the baby.
I offered up a lovely mother's day celebration for my sister- since this is her first. She said she would come for an outdoor visit, only if everyone masked (yet she wears a crappy cloth mask), for 15 minutes.
Okie.
So we did that, to accomodate her, and then the rest of the family enjoyed a lovely lunch at our parents' house.
Baby is 6 months, healthy, robust, sleeping well, and has had no interaction longer than 15 min with anyone except for the new nanny and my sister and her husband.
New nanny asked about going for walks, taking baby to playground, music mommy and me type classes. My sister said no to all.
Baby spends every day inside the house. Outings and contact with the outside world is to the pediatrician.
We are honestly over it and have had so many lovely family dinners and celebrated birthdays together- making up for 2 years of lost time. My sister and unfortunately her baby are missing out. But that is her choice.
Oh well.
OP it is incredibly likely your sister is having postpartum anxiety, it's a disorder and not her just trying to be a b. I completely understand your concern but all your posts come across like it's about you and your families enjoyment, rather than of deep concern for your sister. Which I do think you have, but it sounds like you're being like "well she's bringing this on herself so oh well!!!" and I do understand your frustration. She's not making rational reasonable decisiosn right now. But she needs your empathy not your condemnation. She needs her husband to get her help STAT. I know that's not easy but if I were him (and I've been in this position with a spouse who needed help) I would demand that she at least start seeing a therapist to support her with this transition. Preferably one skilled in CBT and postpartum depression/anxiety (I wonder if ther eis some depression there as well because it's not typical to not want to have some interaction within a six month period).
Anyway my point is this is most likely truly a mental health disorder. So you can be frustrated (and it is frustrating when a family member is having mental health issues, believe me I know, because they aren't rational!) but at the end of the day she needs help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The baby is only six months? So when you made this thread, it was about not being allowed to hold someone else’s three-month-old baby?
Listen, it’d be hard for you to find someone who cares less about covid than I do. And it does sound to me like your sister is having major anxiety issues and that it would really help her to seek treatment for it.
But you are not entitled to hold someone else’s baby, especially their very young baby.
Right?! I assume sister is refusing to let the family interact with the family in part because they were such jerks when she was first postpartum. (OP’s initial post was about not being allowed to hold her nibling when they were one month old.)
Anonymous wrote:The baby is only six months? So when you made this thread, it was about not being allowed to hold someone else’s three-month-old baby?
Listen, it’d be hard for you to find someone who cares less about covid than I do. And it does sound to me like your sister is having major anxiety issues and that it would really help her to seek treatment for it.
But you are not entitled to hold someone else’s baby, especially their very young baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The baby is only six months? So when you made this thread, it was about not being allowed to hold someone else’s three-month-old baby?
Listen, it’d be hard for you to find someone who cares less about covid than I do. And it does sound to me like your sister is having major anxiety issues and that it would really help her to seek treatment for it.
But you are not entitled to hold someone else’s baby, especially their very young baby.
Right?! I assume sister is refusing to let the family interact with the family in part because they were such jerks when she was first postpartum. (OP’s initial post was about not being allowed to hold her nibling when they were one month old.)
Anonymous wrote:OP back with updates.
Spoiler alert- no one is allowed, still, to hold the baby.
I offered up a lovely mother's day celebration for my sister- since this is her first. She said she would come for an outdoor visit, only if everyone masked (yet she wears a crappy cloth mask), for 15 minutes.
Okie.
So we did that, to accomodate her, and then the rest of the family enjoyed a lovely lunch at our parents' house.
Baby is 6 months, healthy, robust, sleeping well, and has had no interaction longer than 15 min with anyone except for the new nanny and my sister and her husband.
New nanny asked about going for walks, taking baby to playground, music mommy and me type classes. My sister said no to all.
Baby spends every day inside the house. Outings and contact with the outside world is to the pediatrician.
We are honestly over it and have had so many lovely family dinners and celebrated birthdays together- making up for 2 years of lost time. My sister and unfortunately her baby are missing out. But that is her choice.
Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:The baby is only six months? So when you made this thread, it was about not being allowed to hold someone else’s three-month-old baby?
Listen, it’d be hard for you to find someone who cares less about covid than I do. And it does sound to me like your sister is having major anxiety issues and that it would really help her to seek treatment for it.
But you are not entitled to hold someone else’s baby, especially their very young baby.
Anonymous wrote:Shut up about how everyone is vaxxed and boosted. Guess what? That doesn’t stop them from spreading COVID.
Signed,
A person whose pastor BIL just led the funeral service for a FOUR YEAR OLD in the Midwest who died of COVID