Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This. What do you say now, Grammy? OK to make baby suffer because you know better than a doctor?
How dumb do you think I am? Obviously if the child has a know sensitivity to X you don't feed X to him. I'm talking about parents who adopt a host of rules in the absence of a problem. Like, no dairy till 1 year. Or no wifi ever.
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: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.
This. What do you say now, Grammy? OK to make baby suffer because you know better than a doctor?