Anonymous wrote:Lots of SAHMs do a bottle now and then too. It's smart to be prepared. I had an ectopic pregnancy when my baby was 14 months old and if I hadn't taught her to take a bottle, it would have been sooooo much harder. Emergencies happen.
Anonymous wrote:You refer to a 12 week maternity leave suggesting you plan to go back. You should give the baby a bottle. I had many friends who had trouble when they went back if they didn’t introduce a bottle before it was almost time to go back to work. Plenty of friends had no trouble too but it is the recommendation generally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t enjoy my MIL getting involved in how I feed the baby, but she’s right that you should get the baby used to taking a bottle if you’re planning to go back to work.
You don’t think OP knows that, and how to purchase bottles herself?
OP also knows she should clothe her baby. Does she intend to take offense to gifts of diapers and onesies?
lol exactly
Can’t you see, it’s not about the item, it’s about the boundary.
Bottles are nice gifts, pacifiers are nice gifts, diapers are nice gifts. But they aren’t nice gifts if they don’t align with the parents’ clear choices. That is the issue here.
OP has chosen to bottle feed starting at some point before she goes back to work. How does this gift not align with her clear choices?
I agree that if she had communicated that she planned to be a SAHM who never used bottles this would
be rude, but she literally plans to use bottles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t enjoy my MIL getting involved in how I feed the baby, but she’s right that you should get the baby used to taking a bottle if you’re planning to go back to work.
You don’t think OP knows that, and how to purchase bottles herself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay to politely tell someone not to tell you how to feed your child, regardless of their sincerity or intentions.
Giving someone who you know plans to pump and bottle feed a gift related to pumping and bottle feeding is not "telling you how to feed your child."
OP's emotions are high because she is postpartum. I'm not blaming her. But the answer to the question of "am I overreacting" is yes. She is. We can be compassionate about the fact that she's postpartum, and also respect her by telling her the truth. She is overreacting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay to politely tell someone not to tell you how to feed your child, regardless of their sincerity or intentions.
Giving someone who you know plans to pump and bottle feed a gift related to pumping and bottle feeding is not "telling you how to feed your child."
OP's emotions are high because she is postpartum. I'm not blaming her. But the answer to the question of "am I overreacting" is yes. She is. We can be compassionate about the fact that she's postpartum, and also respect her by telling her the truth. She is overreacting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t enjoy my MIL getting involved in how I feed the baby, but she’s right that you should get the baby used to taking a bottle if you’re planning to go back to work.
You don’t think OP knows that, and how to purchase bottles herself?
It is traditional in our society to purchase gifts for new moms. It’s also common to buy gifts that will be useful down the road, and not just things that are immediately useful for a newborn. Almost all of the gifts are things that the new moms know how to purchase.
I don't know about OP, but I'm very picky about baby items and prefer to buy my own. Especially when it comes to exposure to plastics. I bought glass ones.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused. You plan to pump and bottle feed, starting in a couple months. Your MIL brought you a gift that will be very useful when you do this thing you plan to do and that she knows you plan to do.
How is that different from someone bringing a baby born in the summer a size six month sweater, or some spoons? People give baby gifts months in advance all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay to politely tell someone not to tell you how to feed your child, regardless of their sincerity or intentions.
Giving someone who you know plans to pump and bottle feed a gift related to pumping and bottle feeding is not "telling you how to feed your child."
OP's emotions are high because she is postpartum. I'm not blaming her. But the answer to the question of "am I overreacting" is yes. She is. We can be compassionate about the fact that she's postpartum, and also respect her by telling her the truth. She is overreacting.