Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a guest room and never will. My solution is to kick one of my kids out of their bedroom or offer an air mattress in another part of the house.
OP here. You'd put 70 year olds on an air mattress? Usually I would offer to sleep on an air mattress, but it's just not happening while I'm pregnant or postpartum. nope.
Anonymous wrote:Keep the baby in your room and set up one of the bedrooms for your in-laws or get a sleeper sofa for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if you had a full size mattress for the guest room instead of a queen? Would that give you enough room to work with?
This would certainly make me flee to a hotel. No way am I sharing a full size with another adult! It's only a few inches wider than a twin.
My husband and I are both pretty thin, so we wouldn’t have any trouble sleeping in a full bed. In fact, we did for years, and it was fine.
Um, the issue isn’t thinness. It’s existence. A full bed is 22” narrower AND also 5” shorter than a king.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if you had a full size mattress for the guest room instead of a queen? Would that give you enough room to work with?
This would certainly make me flee to a hotel. No way am I sharing a full size with another adult! It's only a few inches wider than a twin.
My husband and I are both pretty thin, so we wouldn’t have any trouble sleeping in a full bed. In fact, we did for years, and it was fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if you had a full size mattress for the guest room instead of a queen? Would that give you enough room to work with?
This would certainly make me flee to a hotel. No way am I sharing a full size with another adult! It's only a few inches wider than a twin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a guest room and never will. My solution is to kick one of my kids out of their bedroom or offer an air mattress in another part of the house.
OP here. You'd put 70 year olds on an air mattress? Usually I would offer to sleep on an air mattress, but it's just not happening while I'm pregnant or postpartum. nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Number 1: you plan your house for the people who LIVE IN IT. Not for guests.
Number 2: you can work any number of temporary solutions for when DH's parents come to visit. I'd bunk up your older kids together and they can have that room, but I'd make clear how much less comfortable it will be. And say you won't be offended if they choose a hotel instead.
Understanding this saved my marriage and family. I held onto the guest room and isolated an immediate family member who really needed the space. My visitors have been flexible since (couch, air mattress, the Airbnb 2 streets over that I’ve also personally stayed at, hotels).
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Everyone's comments on giving my son the room really makes me think we need to do it asap. I'll work on it this weekend. I can tell it's been a big deal for him, he's so very proud of not peeing that night time diaper (he's been potty trained during the day since before 2) and is a bit teary eyed about leaving the nursery too. He's excited about the baby but I'm sure becoming a middle child is hard. I've already done 95% of the work for his room and have the curtains, decor and furniture ready to go. Just need to buy the mattress and hang everything. I'd also like to deep clean that nursery so both kids aren't sharing a closet.
Anonymous wrote:How helpful are your in laws when they come?
Anonymous wrote:What if you had a full size mattress for the guest room instead of a queen? Would that give you enough room to work with?