Anonymous wrote:I know why one piece wth a snap bottom is convenient, but why is a romper better than pants?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she have other signs of postpartum anxiety?
Weird, this is not a sign of postpartum anxiety.
And I've never met a dad who cares about this.
Yes, claiming all the pants are too tight is definitely an anxiety red flag and I’m surprised more people aren’t picking upon this. Obviously wearing only rompers isn’t the end of the world but it sounds like she is not coping well right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$1,000,000 on this post is from the MIL not the husband. Granny is upset that baby isn’t wearing the little suit she bought or the Prince George look a like outfit. No self respecting guy would notice let alone care that his baby son isn’t being dressed up in impractical gift outfits.
So my theory is that OP actually is the dad, but he's under heavy duress from the MIL who is demanding photos of the infant in the many ridiculous clothes she sent and is panicking because they baby is outgrowing the "newborn" and 0-3mo outfits already and she's not getting her moneys worth. So she harassing her son about it, and he's in turn harassing his wife, who is literally nursing a 3.5 week old baby around the clock and is just like "WTF who cares," the only appropriate response to anything this stupid when you have child who is less than a month old.
This poor woman is now going to be concern trolled by her own husband and his mother about how she must have PPA because, again, she isn't putting a 3 week old infant in enough "outfits."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you wan to dress your child you should be able to do so. Why does your wife decide what the baby wears?
Many people dress their babies in clothes, it is normal. If there is an outfit you like or end any to wear (maybe gift giver is visiting), put it on baby.
Is your wife controlling in other ways?
Not usually she’s just very particular about how things are done with him.
She thinks that he doesn’t nurse as well in the outfits with pants because the waistband is too tight on his stomach. It’s not. It fits fine and he doesn’t seem uncomfortable I’m concerned it’s new mom anxiety on a whole new level.
Is she usually anxious? How old is the baby? If she starts to get anxious about regular everyday things or starts to try to control you and the environment, that is definitely worth a talk with the doctor.
3.5 weeks. I will keep that in mind to bring up at 6 weeks Appointment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it would bother me if I dress the kid and then my spouse was changing it at the next diaper change (assuming no blow-out). The implication is that what I’m doing as a parent has to be undone. Sure it seems small, but these slights when you’re both new to this parenting world can feel huge and lead quickly to resentment and score keeping.
+1 it's a minor way of undermining that can leave to one parent feeling detached
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you wan to dress your child you should be able to do so. Why does your wife decide what the baby wears?
Many people dress their babies in clothes, it is normal. If there is an outfit you like or end any to wear (maybe gift giver is visiting), put it on baby.
Is your wife controlling in other ways?
Not usually she’s just very particular about how things are done with him.
She thinks that he doesn’t nurse as well in the outfits with pants because the waistband is too tight on his stomach. It’s not. It fits fine and he doesn’t seem uncomfortable I’m concerned it’s new mom anxiety on a whole new level.
Is she usually anxious? How old is the baby? If she starts to get anxious about regular everyday things or starts to try to control you and the environment, that is definitely worth a talk with the doctor.
3.5 weeks. I will keep that in mind to bring up at 6 weeks Appointment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she have other signs of postpartum anxiety?
Weird, this is not a sign of postpartum anxiety.
And I've never met a dad who cares about this.
Anonymous wrote:$1,000,000 on this post is from the MIL not the husband. Granny is upset that baby isn’t wearing the little suit she bought or the Prince George look a like outfit. No self respecting guy would notice let alone care that his baby son isn’t being dressed up in impractical gift outfits.
Anonymous wrote:Does she have other signs of postpartum anxiety?