Anonymous wrote:Three blocks does not equal 10 minutes. The fact that you are exaggerating means you don’t want to do this. So tell them that you can no longer make this work. It doesn’t make you a bad person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you sound like a miserable misanthrope of a person. I can’t imagine not wanting to help a new mom. Maybe she imagines you will have a baby also soon and need help, who knows. But by all means, disabuse her of the notion that most fellow parents wouldn’t care about driving three blocks!!! Out of their way so their kid can ride to school with their friend. I would give zero thoughts about doing this, so I can’t help you. And I never ask for help myself. I just can’t fathom being this miserly. five minutes?!
Not OP but no. She is being taken advantage of.
Wholeheartedly agree with this!! OP, someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
Hard disagree. 5 minutes 3x a week? I’m not seeing the warm heart here. I would not even have to think about this, this is an automatic yes. It’s such a small thing for me and such an enormous help to another family.
People are different though. People often assume that all parents have the same capacity for things but they don't. Like OP this is something I could do in a pinch or for a month or two to help a friend through a transition period but I could not do permanently. This is because my spouse has a job that starts early in the morning and leaves before our kids are even up and I also have a SN kid who often needs extra help. I have our morning routine down pat and could adjust it to help someone out but it would not be a "small thing" -- it would be an imposition I'd be willing to take on to help someone who really needed it.
OP has not given any reason why this is burdensome. She’s just mad because somehow she’s “being taken advantage of.” Frankly, we all need to up what we are doing for our communities and be less selfish. When I saw the dramatic title of this thread I expected some life altering event. But no, OP just can’t take 5 minutes out of her day 3x a week without getting something.
I can tell you're a taker because you only credit OP with five minutes of the ten minute task. Hence, to you, it's not a big deal because you are devaluing her time even in your post.
~ someone who does a ton of carpooling and helping out three kid families
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t mind at all, but you do. So don’t do it. I would simply assume someday I may need help car pooling or whatever. But, petty is as petty does.
That’s unfair. I don’t mind at all helping in a true emergency. This isn’t one.
But you knew going in this was never really going to be an emergency situation? It’s not like you didn’t know up front what the situation was.
I just don’t know why people say yes when they really mean no. You want to be seen as helpful and kind, without ever being either.
Or
Why does a parent who needs a driver for their kid guilt a friend into doing it by lying about the baby's nap schedule? Why not just be clear up front and say "We aren't going to bother making our schedules work to get our kid to school, and though we have child care, we don't want to inconvenience that person, so can you be our free ride? And please don't ask us to reciprocate, because as we mentioned, we have no intention of changing our schedule to help out with anyone's kids, including our own."
It's not the distance or the time that upsets OP, it's the vibe you get when you realize you are laboring for someone who lied to get you to do it and gives you nothing in return, not even a friendship. She's not helping; she's the help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t mind at all, but you do. So don’t do it. I would simply assume someday I may need help car pooling or whatever. But, petty is as petty does.
That’s unfair. I don’t mind at all helping in a true emergency. This isn’t one.
One day you may need help too and this family might be in a position to help. But clearly you're finding it inconvenient so tell them your schedule has changed.
She may need that help someday.
That family will never be the one to actually help OP or another family, though. Come on sweetie.
Ok, since you anonymous internet poster can predict the actions of all people through your magic powers of the thread, I guess there's no more need to discuss this.People have different cycles of life and that their interactions with you can change over time. For example, a few years ago, I felt my neighbors who had many kids with two working parents were taking advantage of me being home on maternity leave and always sending their kids over. But now, I'm off maternity leave, and their kids are older and need less support and of late, they've helped me out more than I've helped them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t mind at all, but you do. So don’t do it. I would simply assume someday I may need help car pooling or whatever. But, petty is as petty does.
That’s unfair. I don’t mind at all helping in a true emergency. This isn’t one.
But you originally agreed to help when there was a true emergency?
Yes, I did. It isn’t an emergency anymore, it’s a convenience. Wouldn’t you think the grandma would have, while holding the baby, come up and ask if I would still mind?
This is not what you initially said.
Before school started, the mom asked me if I would mind picking up her son on the days she works and grandma is there, because the infant is still sleeping at school drop-off time.
So, there wasn't an emergency, and you apparently agreed to do it for an indefinite period of time.
If you have changed your mind, that's fine, that's your right. But don't try to frame it as if they pulled a bait and switch on you, because there's no indication of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t mind at all, but you do. So don’t do it. I would simply assume someday I may need help car pooling or whatever. But, petty is as petty does.
That’s unfair. I don’t mind at all helping in a true emergency. This isn’t one.
But you originally agreed to help when there was a true emergency?
Yes, I did. It isn’t an emergency anymore, it’s a convenience. Wouldn’t you think the grandma would have, while holding the baby, come up and ask if I would still mind?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you sound like a miserable misanthrope of a person. I can’t imagine not wanting to help a new mom. Maybe she imagines you will have a baby also soon and need help, who knows. But by all means, disabuse her of the notion that most fellow parents wouldn’t care about driving three blocks!!! Out of their way so their kid can ride to school with their friend. I would give zero thoughts about doing this, so I can’t help you. And I never ask for help myself. I just can’t fathom being this miserly. five minutes?!
Not OP but no. She is being taken advantage of.
Wholeheartedly agree with this!! OP, someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
Hard disagree. 5 minutes 3x a week? I’m not seeing the warm heart here. I would not even have to think about this, this is an automatic yes. It’s such a small thing for me and such an enormous help to another family.
I’m not seeing YOUR warm heart, only entitlement. No one owes you shit. Take care of your own kids.
I’m taking care of mine and others as well. Not sure how you get entitlement from me saying it’s an automatic yes for me to do such a small thing.
You think everyone should be like you. That's being very generous with time that's not yours.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you sound like a miserable misanthrope of a person. I can’t imagine not wanting to help a new mom. Maybe she imagines you will have a baby also soon and need help, who knows. But by all means, disabuse her of the notion that most fellow parents wouldn’t care about driving three blocks!!! Out of their way so their kid can ride to school with their friend. I would give zero thoughts about doing this, so I can’t help you. And I never ask for help myself. I just can’t fathom being this miserly. five minutes?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you sound like a miserable misanthrope of a person. I can’t imagine not wanting to help a new mom. Maybe she imagines you will have a baby also soon and need help, who knows. But by all means, disabuse her of the notion that most fellow parents wouldn’t care about driving three blocks!!! Out of their way so their kid can ride to school with their friend. I would give zero thoughts about doing this, so I can’t help you. And I never ask for help myself. I just can’t fathom being this miserly. five minutes?!
Not OP but no. She is being taken advantage of.
Wholeheartedly agree with this!! OP, someone saw your good heart and is asking too much
Hard disagree. 5 minutes 3x a week? I’m not seeing the warm heart here. I would not even have to think about this, this is an automatic yes. It’s such a small thing for me and such an enormous help to another family.
One day OP’s kid will get sick and OP will not be driving to school and the other family will be mad that their free taxi service is unavailable. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t mind at all, but you do. So don’t do it. I would simply assume someday I may need help car pooling or whatever. But, petty is as petty does.
That’s unfair. I don’t mind at all helping in a true emergency. This isn’t one.
But you knew going in this was never really going to be an emergency situation? It’s not like you didn’t know up front what the situation was.
I just don’t know why people say yes when they really mean no. You want to be seen as helpful and kind, without ever being either.
Anonymous wrote:OP can you share how this ended up?
Anonymous wrote:I can't even juggle with my own 2 kids. I never ask others to help for pickup/dropoff/carpool, and no one will never reach out to me for the same thing as well. That is why I don't belong to some mom group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the friend should hire a part-time nanny to handle such things as picking up kids from school.
OP, this is a big responsibility that you now resent. Tell your friend that you no longer want this responsibility.
This. What’s wrong with hiring paid help? My college-age niece works as a nanny 3 mornings a week from 6-9. She wakes the kids up, gets them ready for school, takes them to school, and returns home to clean up the kitchen before going to her own classes. She is paid very well for this, which she loves.
Maybe they feel they can’t afford paid help. That’s why they have the grandma helping. It’s also not at all easy to find a helper for just 3 mornings a week. They will need to get an au pair eventually.