Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not a problem. Are you able to help pay for the cost of a nanny? If you can help in that way, great. If you can't, that's okay too. It isn't your responsibility to provide full time childcare. The only way I would feel badly is if you had recently committed to providing childcare and now you are changing your mind.
Why the hell should OP pay for her adult children to hire a nanny for their baby? The baby is not her responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Communicate clearly about what you are willing and not willing to do.
All school year my mom gushes about how she can't wait to host "Camp Grandma" at her house for a week or two over the summer. And every year when it comes time to set the weeks, she decides she's not physically capable of keeping up with 2 kids for a week. Which is fine! But I hate that she lies to me, to my kids, and to herself for 10 months of the year and sets all of us up for disappointment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not a problem. Are you able to help pay for the cost of a nanny? If you can help in that way, great. If you can't, that's okay too. It isn't your responsibility to provide full time childcare. The only way I would feel badly is if you had recently committed to providing childcare and now you are changing your mind.
OP here: Our kids are in their 30s and 40s and are much wealthier than we are so money is not an issue. They both have significantly higher pressure jobs and both WFH. They want/need a daycare situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.
OP here. My kids don’t expect me to provide childcare. It’s me that has a hard time seeing her go to daycare while she’s too young to be vaccinated. My kids did have fertility issues so they are older. Not for lack of trying!
Do all/most daycares require vaccinations? I was not aware of this.
Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes these issues arise when one adult child perceives inequity. Maybe grandma was the daycare provider for her first grandkid(s) but now that another adult child has had a child that child feels entitled to the same support kid #1 got. That feeling of being treated inequitably could be blinding them to the reality of whether grandma is physically and mentally up for the job.