Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would let her come and help with the realization that she isn't really coming to help YOU, she is coming to help with the baby. And that will ultimately wind up being helpful to you.
Don't over think it. It can be a godsend to have someone just hold the baby while you get a slow moving sitz bath or shower. Seriously.
OP here - it isn't a question of her coming or not, but of where she stays. And the earlier help examples I gave were from when she came to help with my second child. She really doesn't help much with the baby. Doesn't change diapers, etc. so I know what I'm getting there already.
She asks what she can do to help - tell her to read to the toddler or hold the baby or build legos with your big kid...or tell her to vacuum the living room, heat up this frozen casserole...
If you start thinking now of the things you could have her do you might find that she really is very helpful.
Is she good with older kids? Can she watch them while you rest and recuperate with the new baby? Can you think of ANYTHING she could do that she wouldn't be high maintenance about it? If not, decline.
OP here. Older kids are in daycare. But I'm confused - I'm asking about having her stay in a hotel vs in my house when she when the new baby is 3 or 4 weeks old. Are you guys suggesting to have her not come at all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would let her come and help with the realization that she isn't really coming to help YOU, she is coming to help with the baby. And that will ultimately wind up being helpful to you.
Don't over think it. It can be a godsend to have someone just hold the baby while you get a slow moving sitz bath or shower. Seriously.
OP here - it isn't a question of her coming or not, but of where she stays. And the earlier help examples I gave were from when she came to help with my second child. She really doesn't help much with the baby. Doesn't change diapers, etc. so I know what I'm getting there already.
She asks what she can do to help - tell her to read to the toddler or hold the baby or build legos with your big kid...or tell her to vacuum the living room, heat up this frozen casserole...
If you start thinking now of the things you could have her do you might find that she really is very helpful.
Is she good with older kids? Can she watch them while you rest and recuperate with the new baby? Can you think of ANYTHING she could do that she wouldn't be high maintenance about it? If not, decline.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would let her come and help with the realization that she isn't really coming to help YOU, she is coming to help with the baby. And that will ultimately wind up being helpful to you.
Don't over think it. It can be a godsend to have someone just hold the baby while you get a slow moving sitz bath or shower. Seriously.
OP here - it isn't a question of her coming or not, but of where she stays. And the earlier help examples I gave were from when she came to help with my second child. She really doesn't help much with the baby. Doesn't change diapers, etc. so I know what I'm getting there already.
She asks what she can do to help - tell her to read to the toddler or hold the baby or build legos with your big kid...or tell her to vacuum the living room, heat up this frozen casserole...
If you start thinking now of the things you could have her do you might find that she really is very helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would let her come and help with the realization that she isn't really coming to help YOU, she is coming to help with the baby. And that will ultimately wind up being helpful to you.
Don't over think it. It can be a godsend to have someone just hold the baby while you get a slow moving sitz bath or shower. Seriously.
OP here - it isn't a question of her coming or not, but of where she stays. And the earlier help examples I gave were from when she came to help with my second child. She really doesn't help much with the baby. Doesn't change diapers, etc. so I know what I'm getting there already.
Anonymous wrote:I would let her come and help with the realization that she isn't really coming to help YOU, she is coming to help with the baby. And that will ultimately wind up being helpful to you.
Don't over think it. It can be a godsend to have someone just hold the baby while you get a slow moving sitz bath or shower. Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:I could talk her down to maybe 3 nights? 4 nights? The help I mentioned earlier - she will make dinner, but then immediately afterwards will start assigning clean-up tasks to my husband and me. And she is a high maintenance helper ("Larla, what pot should I use for this? Where is your basil? Can I use the sea salt?" etc.). I'd rather just get takeout every night, to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What problems do you see when she stays with you? Is it anything that you think can reasonably be changed or just an ingrained part of her personality?
OP here. It's ingrained but if she could just bring herself to stop talking when I say "I don't want to talk about this" then that would go a long way. One example is that the last time she did stay with us, she saw the wooden scoop we keep in the sugar bowl and said that she wouldn't have thought that we would be so unhygienic. I told her that it is completely safe. She kept going on and on, for (literally!) 20 minutes, all while I told her I didn't want to talk about it, chance the subject, etc. She finally stopped when I lost my cool and started actually fighting with her, then ended the whole thing by saying "well I thought it was a reasonable thing to point out to you" as she walked out in a huff, only to later return and accuse me of making her feel unwelcome in my home. The thing that gets me is that these situations are so stupid and petty. And yet they turn into these big deals that completely ruin my day.
I'd say that a benefit of her visiting is that she tries to help, but when she does, she doesn't really help. She'll ask over and over what she can do to help. I finally say that she can weed, and then she'll decide that she needs my old weeding shoes to weed and pester me until I find them for her (all the while with me telling her to forget about it and just sit down and relax). Then she'll weed for 20 minutes, come in, sit down and say she is too old for this and she is tired and needs to rest and how could we possibly expect her to weed the whole house (which, of course, we didn't). Then she'll decide to help by opening windows if it's a nice day, but she can't figure out the storm windows, so she bugs me until I do it. Etc. I just don't really find her help to be worth the hassle or the cost.
Anonymous wrote:OP again - another funny tidbit - she did say that if we let her stay with us she'd "pretend" she was in a hotel by going to the guest room at 7:30pm and staying there until 8 or 9 in the morning. There's no TV in the guest room, so I'm not sure what she'd do, or whether to even believe her, but I just remembered that so thought I would add
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could talk her down to maybe 3 nights? 4 nights? The help I mentioned earlier - she will make dinner, but then immediately afterwards will start assigning clean-up tasks to my husband and me. And she is a high maintenance helper ("Larla, what pot should I use for this? Where is your basil? Can I use the sea salt?" etc.). I'd rather just get takeout every night, to be honest.
Ick, my mother does this, too. We call it "falsetto politeness".