Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know they had the same 'regulations' during your childhood?? Your husband turned out fine...that's probably why your MIL thinks you have a bee-in-your-bonnet.
Moron. So because a child's parents don't have an allergy, the child won't?
Actually, these regulations say no ice cream or rich gravies or puddings. So I don't think they're advocating MIL and SIL's antics either.
Kind of the point. No one follows the regulations 100% of the time. The prior generations didn't die off for eating a little ice cream, neither will yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know they had the same 'regulations' during your childhood?? Your husband turned out fine...that's probably why your MIL thinks you have a bee-in-your-bonnet.
Moron. So because a child's parents don't have an allergy, the child won't?
Actually, these regulations say no ice cream or rich gravies or puddings. So I don't think they're advocating MIL and SIL's antics either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know they had the same 'regulations' during your childhood?? Your husband turned out fine...that's probably why your MIL thinks you have a bee-in-your-bonnet.
Moron. So because a child's parents don't have an allergy, the child won't?
Anonymous wrote:"Barbara, Karen, we know you love Baby, and want to spend time with him. But the bottom line is, you don't respect our parenting choices, and we can't trust you. When we leave Baby with someone, we have to know that our rules and wishes will be followed. These are rules and wishes we base on recommendations from pediatricians, from the latest parenting guidelines, and from our own experience with our child. If you want to babysit, you are going to have to go by our rules. That's final."
Anonymous wrote:You know they had the same 'regulations' during your childhood?? Your husband turned out fine...that's probably why your MIL thinks you have a bee-in-your-bonnet.
Anonymous wrote:You know they had the same 'regulations' during your childhood?? Your husband turned out fine...that's probably why your MIL thinks you have a bee-in-your-bonnet.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they choose to ignore and disrespect you, then they choose not to be allowed to have alone time with baby. If they choose to get in a snit over that and not see you/baby at all, that's their choice, too.
It is THEM choosing to not see you/not see the baby, not you. Too bad for them.
They suck.
+1. What the actual F is wrong with people? Who would want someone so disrespectful watching their kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Absolutely not! Grandparents are there to provide another loving adult that children can bond with and learn from. Grandparents are NOT there to undermine the parents.
I did not say undermine. grandparents are there to be loving adults, which can include the occasional spoiling...
F me....mashed potatoes are now solid foods... for the love of god....
Hey genius...mashed potatoes usually contain butter, milk and/or cream. Babies that age may well have an allergy to cows milk. They are only supposed to have breast milk or formula until a doctor says otherwise at a 9 month checkup.
Idiot.
Okay. I'm of the "respect the parents' wishes," but you're going a bit overboard here. Avoidance of cow's milk in the first year is one of those "abundance of caution" things. A steady diet might be harmful (though there were kids fed this way not so long ago), but an occasional taste is very unlikely to do harm - kind of equivalent to the occasional car ride.
Some parents use rules like these as a means to control their children, other people, etc. It can get pretty crazy.
--PP grandma who has to turn off the wifi.
NP - Actually, is the most common food allergy/intolerance in infants. The proteins pass through to breastmilk, hence why I'm now on a milk free diet for my son who is 3 months old. It also is one of the things that takes the longest to get out of your systems. Most outgrow it by 1 year old. I can assure you I would be pissed at anyone feeding him food without my ok. I don't need a return of his raw, weeping diaper rash and reflux - and he only has a fairly mild intolerance in the range of reactions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Absolutely not! Grandparents are there to provide another loving adult that children can bond with and learn from. Grandparents are NOT there to undermine the parents.
I did not say undermine. grandparents are there to be loving adults, which can include the occasional spoiling...
F me....mashed potatoes are now solid foods... for the love of god....
Hey genius...mashed potatoes usually contain butter, milk and/or cream. Babies that age may well have an allergy to cows milk. They are only supposed to have breast milk or formula until a doctor says otherwise at a 9 month checkup.
Idiot.
Okay. I'm of the "respect the parents' wishes," but you're going a bit overboard here. Avoidance of cow's milk in the first year is one of those "abundance of caution" things. A steady diet might be harmful (though there were kids fed this way not so long ago), but an occasional taste is very unlikely to do harm - kind of equivalent to the occasional car ride.
Some parents use rules like these as a means to control their children, other people, etc. It can get pretty crazy.
--PP grandma who has to turn off the wifi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're choosing to deny your child a close relationship with GPs over a bite of mashed potatoes and ice cream?
Think it over.
e
No, that's not quite it, Champ. It's the ILs that are putting the relationship in jeopardy. The parents have asked the MIL and SIL to respect their wishes. It costs the ILs nothing to do that, yet they continue to disrespect the parents.
And since when does babysitting a baby define a relationship as "close?" The parents are simply saying that the baby will not be left alone with the ILs. They haven't cut off all access. Many families have close relationships without babysitting.
Okay, champ, because telling the in laws they can't be alone with the baby over mashed fucking potatoes isn't going to poison the relationship or anything. Get a clue...champ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the problem is that they disrespect you as the parent.
It's not that they're horribly dangerous. If they can't respect your decisions, they don't get to babysit.
This. It's KFC mashed potatoes now, but as the child gets older, it then becomes more about the child knowing that grandma and auntie don't respect her parents, which is a dangerous message for a kid to get from people she's supposed to trust.
And who knows where they draw the line:
"Of course it's fine to sit in the front seat Larla. You're a first grader now."
"We didn't always wear seat belts growing up, and we survived..."
"Sure, go ahead and light the fireworks. Isn't that fun?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the problem is that they disrespect you as the parent.
It's not that they're horribly dangerous. If they can't respect your decisions, they don't get to babysit.
This. It's KFC mashed potatoes now, but as the child gets older, it then becomes more about the child knowing that grandma and auntie don't respect her parents, which is a dangerous message for a kid to get from people she's supposed to trust.