Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A co-worker from China send her baby to her husband's family back in China for the first year. She was not happy about it.
OMG are you friends with Frugal Asian Finance? https://frugalasianfinance.com/2017/06/28/sent-our-baby-to-china/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my mom is going to come for a month starting when the baby is two weeks old (my first). I really want my husband and I to go through the first few days together, but am realistic enough to know I'm going to want the help
3 adults for a newborn?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It always baffles me when people say they want to go through the first days together just as a nuclear family. Those are the worst! I come from a culture where women are looked after by their parents for at least 40 days after childbirth, and I can tell you that it helps you recover much faster. My parents came and stayed with me, looked after all of the cooking, laundry, etc. My husband handled the shopping while he was on paternity leave but once he went back to work I took over that task, but otherwise just being able to rest in between feeding the baby was great.
DP. I think the problem is precisely that we don't have the culture of supporting the new mother. When I tried to have my MIL come help a few days after the baby was born, it was terrible. We weren't used to living with her, and we had no cultural context for the things she was supposed to do and I was supposed to do. This may be a MIL-DIL issue as well (my biological mother is not in the picture). I desperately wanted help, but it ended up being easier in the short term to cope on my own, because my MIL was making it worse.
You were supposed to breastfeed the baby. They MIL was supposed to do everything else as pp mentioned: cooking, laundry, etc.
Nope. What I actually needed was someone to take the baby so I could sleep. And for my MIL to just do what I asked instead of fighting me on every detail! Think, the type of MIL who reflexively argues with you when you request anything be done in a certain way. Some people just are not cut out to be nurturers and helpers, which is totally fine ... just not in the immediate post partum period!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It always baffles me when people say they want to go through the first days together just as a nuclear family. Those are the worst! I come from a culture where women are looked after by their parents for at least 40 days after childbirth, and I can tell you that it helps you recover much faster. My parents came and stayed with me, looked after all of the cooking, laundry, etc. My husband handled the shopping while he was on paternity leave but once he went back to work I took over that task, but otherwise just being able to rest in between feeding the baby was great.
DP. I think the problem is precisely that we don't have the culture of supporting the new mother. When I tried to have my MIL come help a few days after the baby was born, it was terrible. We weren't used to living with her, and we had no cultural context for the things she was supposed to do and I was supposed to do. This may be a MIL-DIL issue as well (my biological mother is not in the picture). I desperately wanted help, but it ended up being easier in the short term to cope on my own, because my MIL was making it worse.
You were supposed to breastfeed the baby. They MIL was supposed to do everything else as pp mentioned: cooking, laundry, etc.
Anonymous wrote:A co-worker from China send her baby to her husband's family back in China for the first year. She was not happy about it.
Anonymous wrote:Have her come out once DH goes back to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It always baffles me when people say they want to go through the first days together just as a nuclear family. Those are the worst! I come from a culture where women are looked after by their parents for at least 40 days after childbirth, and I can tell you that it helps you recover much faster. My parents came and stayed with me, looked after all of the cooking, laundry, etc. My husband handled the shopping while he was on paternity leave but once he went back to work I took over that task, but otherwise just being able to rest in between feeding the baby was great.
DP. I think the problem is precisely that we don't have the culture of supporting the new mother. When I tried to have my MIL come help a few days after the baby was born, it was terrible. We weren't used to living with her, and we had no cultural context for the things she was supposed to do and I was supposed to do. This may be a MIL-DIL issue as well (my biological mother is not in the picture). I desperately wanted help, but it ended up being easier in the short term to cope on my own, because my MIL was making it worse.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, a baby is really not that hard.