Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is really weird. I know tons of babies born since 2020 and none of their parents are like this. The people defending OP's sister sound as crazy as the sister does. OP, I'd talk to the husband alone and see if he can get her to see someone. He's really the only one with any say.
Op here. Our pediatrician sister had a baby several months ago! She is behaving and acting normally. Taking her baby son out for walks, to the store, to see our family indoors, to the park etc.
Serious question for all the posters who think I’m nuts/obsessed etc- are you people really not leaving your houses? Like still? In 2022?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait are you people serious? You think it’s reasonable to not even take a newborn for a stroller walk outside because…other people might have walked by? Clearly this poor woman is suffering from PPA and needs help..????
+1. OP might be a bit of a cow, but not taking your baby outdoors, ever “because someone might walk by” is also not normal.
Thing is (if she’s real) she probably is taking her baby for plenty of walks outside. She just doesn’t want to go for walks outside with OP[b] who sounds like she’s a controlling busybody.
Anonymous wrote:Wait are you people serious? You think it’s reasonable to not even take a newborn for a stroller walk outside because…other people might have walked by? Clearly this poor woman is suffering from PPA and needs help..????
Anonymous wrote:I have a newborn and we are not seeing any family or friends (other than grandparents who are staying with us to help) until she turns 3 months old. We made this decision before she was born and communicated it. Luckily everyone in my circle understands.
Can you get your sister to put a time limit? Generally babies are more hardy after 3 months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you’re posting so that you can get support from multiple internet strangers who can join you in piling on how “unreasonable “ your sister is?
Your sister gets to decide her own level of acceptable risk for herself — and to work out how to handle that with her husband.
Your sister is probably doing exactly what you have done — just with different conclusions and a different level of risk from yours.
That really is ok.
+1 she's got a tiny baby to take care of and protect, let her do that in whatever way works for her. She's the one that has to live with the decisions she makes
Anonymous wrote:I had post partum anxiety and people telling me to do things I wasn't comfortable with "because you have post partum anxiety" definitely wouldn't have helped me.
Unless she's doing something dangerous or harmful back off and be patient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop posting about it on the Internet and start talking to her husband about having her assessed for postpartum anxiety.
Do you have suggestions on how to phrase the conversation?
The conversation with her husband? “Hey BIL, I’m really worried about sis. She seems super anxious about risks, and at first I kinda understood but it’s starting to feel like now it’s something more than just nerves. Some women develop something called post partum anxiety, and it can be really debilitating. I think pediatricians can screen a new mother for it - you can probably call ahead of your next appointment and raise the concern”.
Anonymous wrote:This is really weird. I know tons of babies born since 2020 and none of their parents are like this. The people defending OP's sister sound as crazy as the sister does. OP, I'd talk to the husband alone and see if he can get her to see someone. He's really the only one with any say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait are you people serious? You think it’s reasonable to not even take a newborn for a stroller walk outside because…other people might have walked by? Clearly this poor woman is suffering from PPA and needs help..????
OP is nuts and this woman cannot be bothered with her. Its not PPA or anything else and its common sense to keep newborn away with cold. flu and covid.
I mean maybe, but I’m going off “She and the baby are literally staying in the house except for drs appt”
That is not healthy
If I was OPs sister I would lie through my teeth about what I was doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait are you people serious? You think it’s reasonable to not even take a newborn for a stroller walk outside because…other people might have walked by? Clearly this poor woman is suffering from PPA and needs help..????
OP is nuts and this woman cannot be bothered with her. Its not PPA or anything else and its common sense to keep newborn away with cold. flu and covid.
I mean maybe, but I’m going off “She and the baby are literally staying in the house except for drs appt”
That is not healthy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait are you people serious? You think it’s reasonable to not even take a newborn for a stroller walk outside because…other people might have walked by? Clearly this poor woman is suffering from PPA and needs help..????
OP is nuts and this woman cannot be bothered with her. Its not PPA or anything else and its common sense to keep newborn away with cold. flu and covid.
Anonymous wrote:As a new mom to an infant, I wouldn’t trust you to respect my boundaries or be respectful/empathetic even on a walk. I bet your sister is just avoiding you. I would. It is such a hard time as a new parent and you seem to lack empathy/be focused only on the baby (which isn’t yours btw and you have no entitlement to see) rather than your sisters well being. I hope that you can find a way to apologize to your sister and ask how SHE is doing. Otherwise, you risk her not wanting to spend much time with you.
PS - New moms hate feeling forgotten especially now. It is hard in normal times to feel like people just fawn over the baby and don’t ask how you are. It’s even harder now.
Anonymous wrote:So, you’re posting so that you can get support from multiple internet strangers who can join you in piling on how “unreasonable “ your sister is?
Your sister gets to decide her own level of acceptable risk for herself — and to work out how to handle that with her husband.
Your sister is probably doing exactly what you have done — just with different conclusions and a different level of risk from yours.
That really is ok.