Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're in the wrong. You said that the younger one routinely handles the weekends so the older one can sleep in or have a sleepover. So, the agreement isn't that the older one handles them every day. It's that she handles them on weekdays, and she is living up to her promise (and not getting enough sleep as a result).
The younger one was awake (as were you) and in a position to feed the kittens. There was no need to rouse the default kitten parent here. Sounds to me like you were grumpy about having to get up and take the cat to be spayed on a weekend morning, so you decided to unnecessarily wake up the daughter who suggested the arrangement in the first place.
Also, your daughter's comment was a little rude, but I can understand why she might feel like you are being insensitive/hypocritical given your highly unusual sleeping pattern. I am a parent of 3 with a full time job and I am at my desk at 8 after having breakfast with my kids and getting them to school. My kids' friends' parents are all up early too, as evidenced by the active morning group chats. Maybe you work evenings or something, but if you don't, you are clearly someone who prioritizes sleep over responsibilities from time to time. Give the kid a break.
She works 10-4! The poor sausage.
I work 7 times per week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're in the wrong. You said that the younger one routinely handles the weekends so the older one can sleep in or have a sleepover. So, the agreement isn't that the older one handles them every day. It's that she handles them on weekdays, and she is living up to her promise (and not getting enough sleep as a result).
The younger one was awake (as were you) and in a position to feed the kittens. There was no need to rouse the default kitten parent here. Sounds to me like you were grumpy about having to get up and take the cat to be spayed on a weekend morning, so you decided to unnecessarily wake up the daughter who suggested the arrangement in the first place.
Also, your daughter's comment was a little rude, but I can understand why she might feel like you are being insensitive/hypocritical given your highly unusual sleeping pattern. I am a parent of 3 with a full time job and I am at my desk at 8 after having breakfast with my kids and getting them to school. My kids' friends' parents are all up early too, as evidenced by the active morning group chats. Maybe you work evenings or something, but if you don't, you are clearly someone who prioritizes sleep over responsibilities from time to time. Give the kid a break.
She works 10-4! The poor sausage.
I work 7 times per week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're in the wrong. You said that the younger one routinely handles the weekends so the older one can sleep in or have a sleepover. So, the agreement isn't that the older one handles them every day. It's that she handles them on weekdays, and she is living up to her promise (and not getting enough sleep as a result).
The younger one was awake (as were you) and in a position to feed the kittens. There was no need to rouse the default kitten parent here. Sounds to me like you were grumpy about having to get up and take the cat to be spayed on a weekend morning, so you decided to unnecessarily wake up the daughter who suggested the arrangement in the first place.
Also, your daughter's comment was a little rude, but I can understand why she might feel like you are being insensitive/hypocritical given your highly unusual sleeping pattern. I am a parent of 3 with a full time job and I am at my desk at 8 after having breakfast with my kids and getting them to school. My kids' friends' parents are all up early too, as evidenced by the active morning group chats. Maybe you work evenings or something, but if you don't, you are clearly someone who prioritizes sleep over responsibilities from time to time. Give the kid a break.
She works 10-4! The poor sausage.
Anonymous wrote:You're in the wrong. You said that the younger one routinely handles the weekends so the older one can sleep in or have a sleepover. So, the agreement isn't that the older one handles them every day. It's that she handles them on weekdays, and she is living up to her promise (and not getting enough sleep as a result).
The younger one was awake (as were you) and in a position to feed the kittens. There was no need to rouse the default kitten parent here. Sounds to me like you were grumpy about having to get up and take the cat to be spayed on a weekend morning, so you decided to unnecessarily wake up the daughter who suggested the arrangement in the first place.
Also, your daughter's comment was a little rude, but I can understand why she might feel like you are being insensitive/hypocritical given your highly unusual sleeping pattern. I am a parent of 3 with a full time job and I am at my desk at 8 after having breakfast with my kids and getting them to school. My kids' friends' parents are all up early too, as evidenced by the active morning group chats. Maybe you work evenings or something, but if you don't, you are clearly someone who prioritizes sleep over responsibilities from time to time. Give the kid a break.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughter's responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughter’s responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
So you knew the kittens would be cared for and you woke your dd anyway? Why are you so resentful about your younger dd helping out if she does so voluntarily?
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughters responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughters responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughter’s responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
SHE wanted the foster cats. We as a family agreed we would help by entertaining them, and buying supplies plus driving them to the vet and meeting up with adopters. Her sister already does more than we as a family agreed on. Her sister sometimes feeds them and cleans the litterbox when that is my oldest daughters responsibility. I told my oldest that if she continues on with her bad attitude, we will not be fostering anymore in the future and she said that was really unfair since she was doing all the work and she enjoys fostering cats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are. Your daughter sounds way more mature than you do.
+1 Honestly it sounds like OP resented having to be up an hour early herself to drive to the spay appointment and picked a fight with DD15 as payback since she agreed to the fostering for that kid.