Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why people are so dramatic about sharing a bathroom. But I grew up in a house with one bathroom, and in the event of a potty emergency, a basement toilet. That's how my parents grew up too (and they were from huge families). You just get in, do your business, and get out. If you take too long of a shower, you might have to deal with someone coming in to go pee while you're in there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous[b wrote:]Littlest baby[/b] stays with grandparents. Others get a hotel suite. This is what hotels are for and it will make your visit go 1000x more smoothly.
np No way would I be away from my baby! a pre-schooler, fine but, not an infant!
Anonymous[b wrote:]Littlest baby[/b] stays with grandparents. Others get a hotel suite. This is what hotels are for and it will make your visit go 1000x more smoothly.
Anonymous wrote:9:27 again- oh and my parents did kind of flip their shit the first time. They come from big pile-in families where everyone shared a room growing up and we always stayed with family than visiting them. They didn’t really get it. But you know what? They got over it. It’s fine now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My parents insist that we cannot stay at hotels, so we mostly don’t visit or I go solo with my toddler. My parents’ house has two bathrooms but a tiny hot water heater and messed-up plumbing. My mom will not share a bathroom and has an elaborately long getting-ready routine. So everyone else gets cold showers and has to announce everything they’re doing that involves running water, flushing, or showering, because if you do anything while someone is showering, you’ll freeze or scald them. We can’t shower at night because “the house is shut down for the night” and it’s too noisy. More than two adults getting ready within an hour is impossible and it seems like every conversation is about bathroom schedules.
Let me guess, they also close the kitchen and seem perplexed that they salad you ate for dinner won’t tide you over until 7 AM because it was “hearty” salad.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My parents insist that we cannot stay at hotels, so we mostly don’t visit or I go solo with my toddler. My parents’ house has two bathrooms but a tiny hot water heater and messed-up plumbing. My mom will not share a bathroom and has an elaborately long getting-ready routine. So everyone else gets cold showers and has to announce everything they’re doing that involves running water, flushing, or showering, because if you do anything while someone is showering, you’ll freeze or scald them. We can’t shower at night because “the house is shut down for the night” and it’s too noisy. More than two adults getting ready within an hour is impossible and it seems like every conversation is about bathroom schedules.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I hear what lots of you are saying about the hotel, and I wouldn't mind it, but my parents would flip a shit, espicially since brother who has kids is a huge people pleaser, and would probably sleep standing up just to stay at their house and keep them happy LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Hotel.
Can grandparents get rid of furniture to make room for a PNP? They really only need a bed and night stands. We have a tiny house and we can fit a PNP with a queen in our bedroom but not much room.
One of the bedrooms has a big desk that they could get rid of, and would allow for enough space for a PNP. The other two bedrooms have enough space for a PNP and two twin beds, but it would be VERY tight.
Anonymous wrote:I know this is not possible for everyone, but my parents finished their basement, adding a bedroom plus living space and a large bathroom, once grandkids started coming.
This is an intriguing idea. My parents have an unfinished basement that they have talked about finishing for the past 20 years or so, and I wonder if this will push them to do so. They have the money, but from a practical standpoint, it would be a tough sell, as the basement would go unused for 90% of the year. Still though, it's an interesting idea, and I wonder what the best way to broach that with them?