Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you are nuts. Grandma does not have to get up at 5 or 6 to prove their love.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your family sounds pretty selfish. My siblings get up early, make coffee and enjoy time with their nieces/nephews! Often we are pushed back to bed to relax and parents/siblings cover the kids.
This! What's the point of visiting these people if they don't want to interact with your young children, OP?
Staying home is your best option, but if you feel you MUST go, then get your own Airbnb or something. This doesn't sound like any fun. Plus, saying your "baby was really bad over Thanksgiving" is kind of a rough indictment for a 1-year-old.
Thanks for weighing in, Grandma. Sounds like you're grouchy and it's time for your nap.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you are being more sensitive than neccessary? Kids make noise. Preferably not at 530am, but 100% definitely before 10am. Lay clothes out the night before and hustle the kids in to the car. Adults can go back to sleep after your 15 minutes of loudness getting kids out the door. Drive to a restaurant or play zone. Put the winter clothes in the car the night before and bundle them once you're out the door and find a place to walk around outside. Then when you get home they can take warm baths and eat 2nd breakfast.
I would aim to keep the kids quiet until 730 but would feel zero guilt after that. Anyone who complains is not worth your time.
I remember my mom putting out plastic spoons with cereal when we stayed with my grandparents because apparently the metal spoons were too loud.... 30 years later I'm still kind of offended by that! A grown adult should accept that little kids are noisy and plan for it. They can wear earplugs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I ever have grandkids I will get up with them and let the parents sleep. I'm a natural early riser and so was my grandpa. He and I used to make pancakes together, it was the best.
+1 this is my parents. It makes so much sense and they love spending time together. Having grandkids or niece/nephews that age should be viewed as a treat, not a disruption.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are 4, 3, and 1. They usually wake up at 7am when we're home, but when we travel they start waking at 6-6:30. Baby was really bad over Thanksgiving and was up at 5:30. At home, we let them talk, whine and play in their cribs until 7:30.
What do you do when you're at other people's homes? I try plying my kids with food and staying in a different section of the house, but it's hard. They're LOUD. Inlaws house has an awful floorplan where all the bedrooms are together on one side and the TV backs up to the bedrooms (so we can't use it). Or we have stayed in big AirBnBs (with my entire family) and it's the same issue. The rest of the family, particularly our siblings, want to sleep until 10am and then eat a big breakfast. My kids won't sit for breakfast either because they've already eaten hours ago. There's usually snow outside, so I can't go outside walking with the kids without making a huge racket and they don't want to run errands or play outside without breakfast.
The lack of sleep I get and the annoyance of trying to keep kids quiet all morning really ruins trips for me. Am I missing something? Hotels sound even worse with all of us in the same room and nothing to do until things open.
We watch something on a labtop. But when our youngest was one, he wouldn’t stay quiet for two hours even with screens. So we would just change diapers and leave the house - walk around parking lots, explore coffee shops, etc. One parent would go each day and the other would sleep in. We sometimes had to drive 30-40 minutes to find something open but we had nothing but time to kill.
We would return at eight am and have the run of the public areas of the house. That’s all the sleeping in you get on a family trip with young kids - sorry hungover uncles!
Anonymous wrote:Your family sounds pretty selfish. My siblings get up early, make coffee and enjoy time with their nieces/nephews! Often we are pushed back to bed to relax and parents/siblings cover the kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- It's a struggle to leave the house in the morning. Do you keep a suitcase near the door and change in the family room? Changing 3 kids plus myself into clothes, hats, coats, shoes and diapers is really loud. The baby especially sings and is noisy, which would wake the whole house. Being able to watch TV in the mornings would help, but not really since the baby doesn't watch it.
And sorry about saying the baby was bad. Baby isn't bad, just had a bad time sleeping.
This is a really rural area. They don't have hotel suites, just gross Motel 8 style hotels.
I was just curious how everyone handles this. My kids can't be the only ones up at dawn.
Anonymous wrote:When the kids wake up, have clothes/coats ready to go, dress them quickly and head out the door to a kid friendly breakfast place. (local diner, donut place, even McDonalds whatever it takes). Then find a nearby park with a playground. Run them around the playground for a while.
That should take care of enough time to return home around 10am. The kids get a morning snack while everyone else has breakfast and regale the relatives with how the playground climber is different than the one by your house.
Anonymous wrote:Tell everyone the night before to put a sound machine video on YouTube so they won’t get disturbed in the morning.
Anonymous wrote:Your family sounds pretty selfish. My siblings get up early, make coffee and enjoy time with their nieces/nephews! Often we are pushed back to bed to relax and parents/siblings cover the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you are nuts. Grandma does not have to get up at 5 or 6 to prove their love.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your family sounds pretty selfish. My siblings get up early, make coffee and enjoy time with their nieces/nephews! Often we are pushed back to bed to relax and parents/siblings cover the kids.
This! What's the point of visiting these people if they don't want to interact with your young children, OP?
Staying home is your best option, but if you feel you MUST go, then get your own Airbnb or something. This doesn't sound like any fun. Plus, saying your "baby was really bad over Thanksgiving" is kind of a rough indictment for a 1-year-old.
Thanks for weighing in, Grandma. Sounds like you're grouchy and it's time for your nap.
Wench people like to sleep in. Even people who live their family. Hey a dumb A litmus test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your family sounds pretty selfish. My siblings get up early, make coffee and enjoy time with their nieces/nephews! Often we are pushed back to bed to relax and parents/siblings cover the kids.
This is impressive! Do your siblings have their own kids?
Be grateful you have such a helpful and engaged family - this is not the norm.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- It's a struggle to leave the house in the morning. Do you keep a suitcase near the door and change in the family room? Changing 3 kids plus myself into clothes, hats, coats, shoes and diapers is really loud. The baby especially sings and is noisy, which would wake the whole house. Being able to watch TV in the mornings would help, but not really since the baby doesn't watch it.
And sorry about saying the baby was bad. Baby isn't bad, just had a bad time sleeping.
This is a really rural area. They don't have hotel suites, just gross Motel 8 style hotels.
I was just curious how everyone handles this. My kids can't be the only ones up at dawn.