Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always hire someone to help you instead of relying on your inlaws if you find them that taxing.
Exactly! People who use their in-laws as babysitters are so lame.
Anonymous wrote:You can always hire someone to help you instead of relying on your inlaws if you find them that taxing.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
1) The reason I've needed their help is because I sometimes need to work very early before starts (i.e. work may start at 6am or 7am). My DH usually works from home several days a week and is otherwise flexible to my job requirements when he's home, but it makes it difficult when he's traveling for an entire week which sometimes can happen unexpectedly (and no, he does not have an option to not travel, it's literally his job/career to visit sites sometimes). Money for outside help is tight until we are done paying for daycare, a car, and a student loan (all will be done in a year, very exciting!)
2) I am NOT asking for anyone else to solve this as a "problem," that was not the intent of my post. I was just looking for others who have felt similarly as a little empathy helps when you feel like you're wiped out as I was at the time. I am very grateful to have in laws who I get along with and have fun with and have a relationship with that seems quite different than many others on DCUM - especially not having living parents. However, yes, I am also mentally and physically exhausted by the time they leave. I might feel similarly if my own family visited for a week at a time too, but I don't have living parents to compare to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty surprised your inlaws help. My DH travels 3 weeks a month (M-F) and my inlaws expect us to go visit when he's home. It annoys me to no end because not only do they not help, but they demand the little free time he has.
But I agree that people visiting is stressful. You just can't be yourself around strangers.
OP here - I'm very much an introvert, so I definitely struggle with needing time to do things that keep me sane - namely alone time and exercise, when they visit.
Instead of being "on," give yourself full permission to be "off."
When my ILs visit, I say goodnight when the kids do, after bath and right before bedtime. Then I hide up in my room with pre-stocked snacks and Netflix.
On the weekends, I throw myself into folding laundry, yard work, errands, shopping, or anything that will either get me alone time or get me out of the house. If they say something, I smile and play my trump card: "You've been mentioning how much you want to see the kids, so I'm going to give you the kids and get some chores done!"
Now, I still make nice dinners for them, set up coffee for them, and go out if we all do something together like go to a museum. So it's not like I 100% ignore them. But I don't stay up late and "chat" with them; that's my husband's job, if he chooses to do it. I don't linger after breakfast when they want 3 more cups of coffee and to watch morning news shows--I'm off on a run, and then I've got that laundry to fold!
My feeling is, if they want to visit, let them visit. But that doesn't have to change my life that much. If anything, it gives me an excuse to tackle some of the bigger chores like changing out seasonal kid clothes, or reorganizing the pantry.
Anonymous wrote:Totally normal to be exhausted.
You’re doing better than I would. There is no way I would host my husbands parents without him here for a week. I personally prefer to do it alone when my husband is gone (including six months deployments). More people just disrupt the schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Kind of petty, it seems, to suggest that they live for these and other family visits. Maybe at least one of them finds visiting for so long to be unbearable, but does it because you need the free help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always hire someone to help you instead of relying on your inlaws if you find them that taxing.
I'm not DCUM rich, especially while we still have one child in daycare and the other in aftercare.
So in sum, both your kids are cared for by others during the bulk of their waking hours, your - by your own admission - perfectly nice and helpful inlaws offer to come stay and help you even further, but you don't like that yet are too cheap to pay for any help? Sorry it's hard to find sympathy in this case.
Anonymous wrote:I think you should try it without their help. I have a 6 month old, 3 and a 5 year old. 2 different schools and I work full time in a senior level. It’s not as hard as you think. I actually find it’s easy when Dh is gone. I gird myself and am super organized. Simple dinners that are healthy. I start work early and get it all done. I keep the kids in line- play, dinner, baths, bed and I don’t let anyone stray. Dh was gone for 3 weeks in December and I did take off 2 days a week but that was also because I had tons and tons of Christmas stuff to get through. Decorating, wrapping etc. I also need to so absolutely all chores before the weekend so I can be fully there with the kids all weekend. Weekends are hell sometimes but my kids don’t think so at least. I have no help other than daycare. Anyways, I just think adding in-laws to the plate would be way way more than I could take.