Anonymous wrote:Sorry DEAR but...what? I honestly don't understand the point of your post. Hurrah you've had a bunch of kids and your life is hard and you know other people with kids. What does that have to do with MY mom being tired?
Anonymous wrote:So to clarify, it's not the 8 hours of childcare I have an issue with. It's the TWENTY FOUR hour childcare I have an issue with. SIL flew in, napped until it was time for her to work, and after her work hours didn't care to help my mom with any of the housework, AND my mom put nephew to bed.
Anonymous wrote:So to clarify, it's not the 8 hours of childcare I have an issue with. It's the TWENTY FOUR hour childcare I have an issue with. SIL flew in, napped until it was time for her to work, and after her work hours didn't care to help my mom with any of the housework, AND my mom put nephew to bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are about 30 mins to airport. I am a FTM so maybe I don't get this, but there's no way I could quickly just feed, burp, and change the baby. The baby eats on his timeline. It can take him 10 min or 40 mins to finish a bottle. He also wakes up on his timeline. Although we are a 30 min drive I wanted to leave an hour early bc I don't know the way that well and it was dark and raining and I was driving my moms car. Also wanted to make sure I was there on time so she wouldn't be waiting w toddler. As it was, her flight was a little delayed so 30 min drive plus 20 min wait, plus 30 min drive means an hour and 20 min of angry uncomfotanle baby. Again maybe there is something I'm missing here as a FTM but I didn't think taking baby with me was reasonable. Yes I am an "only daughter" and maybe that has something to do with it. But also I was here all week last week and I see how darn old my mom looks and feels. She still works almost full time running her own business. And BIL and SIL, when they visit, like to drink wine and get hungover. Before a night of drinking they'd say to my mom-you're waking up with the baby right?" And then they get wasted. So maybe it's a combination of only daughter competition plus I feel they are truly taking advantage of my moms kind heart. I do work ft at a salary job and have a second income producing revenue business of my own as well. I'm currently on maternity leave for the salary job but working the second job.
You're a full-time Mom with a 10-week old and a mom to help you all week. BFD. Your SIL works full-time, flew cross-country solo and is working. All while trying to get much needed sleep. You sound pathetic OP. I'm feel SO sorry for your SIL that she has to add your craziness to her list of things to deal with.
What does she have to deal with? She took the red eye. It's over now. She's basically dumped my nephew on grandma. And guess what I realized today. My mom and I worked all day to take care of the house and babies and both of us worked too. We even had surprise guests and just finished cleaning up after them. Did SIL help? Nope? That fine if you are a guest. But the way I grew up children are not guests. So you can have your pick- be a daughter and help mom out, or be a guest and do your own thing. But please don't be a guest, expect full time day care out of my mom, and expect me not to be pissed off about it.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound tired, which is reasonable for a FTM of an infant. Go on care.com and hire a babysitter to watch both your infant and your nephew and all of you should go to bed for a while. Your SIL isn't being unreasonable and has made an effort to come to your MILs house, which is a really big trek with a toddler - something you can't quite understand yet because you don't have a toddler. You were nice to pick them up at the airport and your mom was nice to watch your baby so you could do this. Nobody is in the wrong here, it just sounds like you are all stretched too thin caring for kids and working.
This is a situation where you need to throw money at it and buy yourselves some time to sleep and catch up on work. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:At first, I thought OP was being unreasonable, but from her follow up post, it does seem like her SIL is taking advantage of the mom. I totally understand the SIL needing a nap after the red eye with no sleep, and there was an agreement that the mom would care for the kid while SIL was working. But if the SIL has not taken back parenting duties after her working hours, that does seem to overreach.
That said, this is between SIL and your mom. I think no good can come of you getting involved. (Also, you have a little baby to take care of, try to relax and focus on your little one. Also, as a mom of a 9-month old a four-year old, I personally think that a 10-week old can be way harder to manage than a 2.5-year old if the baby is a difficult one like my first one was, so I don't get the posters who are acting like having a 10-week old is a walk in the park, unless you happen to have a very easy baby.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. As a FTM, it's possible OP isn't comfortable caring for both children. Think back to when you had your firstborn, in the first few months of their life; it's somehow all-encompassing - remember when you could barely brush your teeth or sit downfor a decent meal? In retrospect, when we get into a groove, our child gets older and particularly when we add another child to the mix, it's hard to remember how and why it felt so hard, and like so much work - but c'mon, we've all been there. I remember sometimes feeding could take up to an hour with my firstborn, then a couple hours I was hearing up to feed him again. So maybe cut OP a bit of slack as a FTM.
If that's the case, then OP is clearly wrong coming here and blaming the SIL for her mother's exhaustion. OP has been there a week, enjoying her mother's hospitality and help and wearing out her mother. SIL has been there one day after taking a redeye with a toddler then getting a few hours of sleep while her MIL watched her son as promised. She came out early to visit because her MIL wanted to spend time with her grandson and agreed to watch the grandson while she worked. So, she took a nap instead of working. OP still is in the wrong blaming SIL for the problems. OP needs to either be an adult and take responsibility for helping her mother cope or admit that she's part of the problem instead of trying to blame it all on the SIL.
Additionally, while I would agree with you for a newborn, but by 7-8 months, it's already starting to get better. At 10 months, yes, it's still a lot of work, but it shouldn't be at the same level as the first couple of months with the sleep deprivation. At that point, most children are sleeping at least 4-6 hours at a stretch instead of 2-3 hours. Plus, she's had her mother helping her for a week.
Right now, OP is just a spoiled entitled child who is getting catty, territorial and won't share her mother with her SIL and nephew.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. As a FTM, it's possible OP isn't comfortable caring for both children. Think back to when you had your firstborn, in the first few months of their life; it's somehow all-encompassing - remember when you could barely brush your teeth or sit downfor a decent meal? In retrospect, when we get into a groove, our child gets older and particularly when we add another child to the mix, it's hard to remember how and why it felt so hard, and like so much work - but c'mon, we've all been there. I remember sometimes feeding could take up to an hour with my firstborn, then a couple hours I was hearing up to feed him again. So maybe cut OP a bit of slack as a FTM.
Anonymous wrote:So to clarify, it's not the 8 hours of childcare I have an issue with. It's the TWENTY FOUR hour childcare I have an issue with. SIL flew in, napped until it was time for her to work, and after her work hours didn't care to help my mom with any of the housework, AND my mom put nephew to bed.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. As a FTM, it's possible OP isn't comfortable caring for both children. Think back to when you had your firstborn, in the first few months of their life; it's somehow all-encompassing - remember when you could barely brush your teeth or sit downfor a decent meal? In retrospect, when we get into a groove, our child gets older and particularly when we add another child to the mix, it's hard to remember how and why it felt so hard, and like so much work - but c'mon, we've all been there. I remember sometimes feeding could take up to an hour with my firstborn, then a couple hours I was hearing up to feed him again. So maybe cut OP a bit of slack as a FTM.