Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course it's fair for anyone to ask for anything, just like it's fair for anyone to say no to any favor being asked of them.
I ageee with this. I’m a work from home mom. During the pandemic when we didn’t have childcare my close friend let me know she felt like I was leaning on her too often. I thanked her helpful for letting me know, apologized, and adjusted. I’ve tried to be more mindful of helping with her kids more often when I can. I appreciated that she set boundaries and let me know what they were when I hadn’t realized it was getting to be more than she wanted and I was just a bit overwhelmed and oblivious.
Anonymous wrote:Of course it's fair for anyone to ask for anything, just like it's fair for anyone to say no to any favor being asked of them.
Anonymous wrote:Often? No.
In a pinch sure.
Did they offer to pay you back in some way, like taking your kids somewhere on the weekend?
This isn’t new.Anonymous wrote:Is it fair for commuters to ask their SAHP and WFHP neighbors and friends to drive and babysit their children often?
Obviously, no one minds helping out in emergency but its not someone else's problem if you regularly can't show up for your offspring or decided to live far from your work. One may be also picking their kid but planning to stop for lunch or at grandma's house or rush home for a meeting or chore, not dropping extra kids at their home.
Shouldn't there be as much compensation as market rate and acceptance for people saying no if it doesn't suit them? Why one saying no comes out as unreasonable not the one asking?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a working mom and I am VERY careful about not taking advantage of my sahm friends.
Anonymous wrote:Is it fair for commuters to ask their SAHP and WFHP neighbors and friends to drive and babysit their children often?
Obviously, no one minds helping out in emergency but its not someone else's problem if you regularly can't show up for your offspring or decided to live far from your work. One may be also picking their kid but planning to stop for lunch or at grandma's house or rush home for a meeting or chore, not dropping extra kids at their home.
Shouldn't there be as much compensation as market rate and acceptance for people saying no if it doesn't suit them? Why one saying no comes out as unreasonable not the one asking?
Anonymous wrote:Long time WFH parent and no one has ever asked me for this.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a SAHM and never, not once, has anyone asked me to watch their kids. Not a single solitary time.