Anonymous wrote:It's a new baby and a new life. Are you going to shun the kid forever?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you plan to always treat this child as a lesser member of the family (which would be really shitty of you), you do the same for this child that you would do for any other.
C'mon OP, be a better person that this.
I'm not rejecting the baby, my question is whether is gift is a reward for stupid choices . The baby is too young to know anything about gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh I get it OP. I wouldn't attend a shower for a mother in such a position. If it was family I would send a blanket or something useful for the baby. Diapers, zip up onesies, etc.
This PP and the OP are terrible people. I can't even.
Why enable? I have a family member like this. She's always asking other family members for money. They feel guilty and bad for the kids so they support her lazy self.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh I get it OP. I wouldn't attend a shower for a mother in such a position. If it was family I would send a blanket or something useful for the baby. Diapers, zip up onesies, etc.
This PP and the OP are terrible people. I can't even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a different perspective - these are the babies I always give a little extra to. Newly divorced, stressed mom, terrible baby daddy, probably lots of family drama in general - this baby needs all the help it can get to start into life right. Most dual income, married, employed familiesdont need the gift "showered" on them when a baby is born; the reality is in these types of scenarios, the families often DO need the gifts. Don't think of it as a reward, think of it as a needed hand and a kindnessfor the baby.
That makes sense really. I can do that. I want to help them all be OK without enabling her and her bad choices.
Anonymous wrote:Eh I get it OP. I wouldn't attend a shower for a mother in such a position. If it was family I would send a blanket or something useful for the baby. Diapers, zip up onesies, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a different perspective - these are the babies I always give a little extra to. Newly divorced, stressed mom, terrible baby daddy, probably lots of family drama in general - this baby needs all the help it can get to start into life right. Most dual income, married, employed familiesdont need the gift "showered" on them when a baby is born; the reality is in these types of scenarios, the families often DO need the gifts. Don't think of it as a reward, think of it as a needed hand and a kindnessfor the baby.
That makes sense really. I can do that. I want to help them all be OK without enabling her and her bad choices.
Sorry, same PP again. If you're especially piqued (and it sounds like you are), you also don't have to get a standard "congratulations" card. Get a pretty, blank card and address it from a place of welcome to the new baby eg "Welcome to the world, Baby Larla. I'm so excited to finally meet you and I'm looking forward to watching you grow". Again, it leaves mom's choices out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From a different perspective - these are the babies I always give a little extra to. Newly divorced, stressed mom, terrible baby daddy, probably lots of family drama in general - this baby needs all the help it can get to start into life right. Most dual income, married, employed familiesdont need the gift "showered" on them when a baby is born; the reality is in these types of scenarios, the families often DO need the gifts. Don't think of it as a reward, think of it as a needed hand and a kindnessfor the baby.
That makes sense really. I can do that. I want to help them all be OK without enabling her and her bad choices.
Really? Do you think when she's presented with the next option for a one-night stand she's going to make her decision based on whether or not you offered a gift and well-wishes?