Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone. We are planning to hire a post-part um doula for 2-3 nights ( 8 hours) a week and 2-3 days ( 5-6 hours) for the daytime. I love my baby and I enjoy spending time with him, but I suffered from a mild form of fibromyalgia. I’ve been having a lot issues with sore muscles and nerve pain with all the holding and rocking I’ve been doing. I would love some help do get some relief and be able to sleep. I’m also switching over to pumping because nursing doesn’t seem like it’s working out. It’s a lot. It’s hard to watch the baby and pump at the same time.
I’ve had mom friends care for 2-3 kids all by themselves. I have a strong support system but still worried about being judged.
No judgement but do have money. A real postpartum doula - not a night nanny - can cost $30/hours or more. We looked into one and ended up by The Snoo instead. We also hired a PT nanny with 10+ years of newborn experience while I was in maternity leave. I make good money but there was no way I would pay that amount for a night and daytime doula.
Snoo worked great for my first and not at all for my second. It’s a lot of money for something that may not work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone. We are planning to hire a post-part um doula for 2-3 nights ( 8 hours) a week and 2-3 days ( 5-6 hours) for the daytime. I love my baby and I enjoy spending time with him, but I suffered from a mild form of fibromyalgia. I’ve been having a lot issues with sore muscles and nerve pain with all the holding and rocking I’ve been doing. I would love some help do get some relief and be able to sleep. I’m also switching over to pumping because nursing doesn’t seem like it’s working out. It’s a lot. It’s hard to watch the baby and pump at the same time.
I’ve had mom friends care for 2-3 kids all by themselves. I have a strong support system but still worried about being judged.
No judgement but do have money. A real postpartum doula - not a night nanny - can cost $30/hours or more. We looked into one and ended up by The Snoo instead. We also hired a PT nanny with 10+ years of newborn experience while I was in maternity leave. I make good money but there was no way I would pay that amount for a night and daytime doula.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone. We are planning to hire a post-part um doula for 2-3 nights ( 8 hours) a week and 2-3 days ( 5-6 hours) for the daytime. I love my baby and I enjoy spending time with him, but I suffered from a mild form of fibromyalgia. I’ve been having a lot issues with sore muscles and nerve pain with all the holding and rocking I’ve been doing. I would love some help do get some relief and be able to sleep. I’m also switching over to pumping because nursing doesn’t seem like it’s working out. It’s a lot. It’s hard to watch the baby and pump at the same time.
I’ve had mom friends care for 2-3 kids all by themselves. I have a strong support system but still worried about being judged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m considering hiring a night nanny and a PT nanny. I have one newborn child. I could use the help but I’m nervous about people judging me for hiring help. I don’t want to my friends/family to silently judge me and think I’m a bad mom. Any tips and advice to get over it or not let nay judgement bother me?
I won't be silent as I judge you as lazy and selfish, which you are. It is your responsibility as a parent to take care of your children. You owe this to them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m considering hiring a night nanny and a PT nanny. I have one newborn child. I could use the help but I’m nervous about people judging me for hiring help. I don’t want to my friends/family to silently judge me and think I’m a bad mom. Any tips and advice to get over it or not let nay judgement bother me?
I won't be silent as I judge you as lazy and selfish, which you are. It is your responsibility as a parent to take care of your children. You owe this to them!
I don’t get this attitude. First of all when a woman has a newborn is t she recovering from the birth? Why do we expect someone whose recovering from birth to take care of a baby twenty four seven?
Anonymous wrote:
Stop caring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m considering hiring a night nanny and a PT nanny. I have one newborn child. I could use the help but I’m nervous about people judging me for hiring help. I don’t want to my friends/family to silently judge me and think I’m a bad mom. Any tips and advice to get over it or not let nay judgement bother me?
I won't be silent as I judge you as lazy and selfish, which you are. It is your responsibility as a parent to take care of your children. You owe this to them!
Anonymous wrote:Oh, lord. Op, ignore anyone giving you grief. And work on ignoring it for the next couple decades. Here's the thing: people will judge you NO MATTER WHAT forever. I say this as a parent of a now-grown kid who went to public school and daycare while his mom divorced his dad, went on dates with people I had no intention of marrying, worked outside of the house, threw a Sbarro pizza from Union Statiom on the swim team potluck table, and had a toddler who found gum under the table at the laundromat and chewed it. Sincerely and truly, other people's opinions aren't worth your worry, and some of the "perfect parents" have kids who grow up and really let you quietly enjoy your schadenfreude for all the judgement they throw your way when your kids are little.