Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7-10 days is just lazy...and dare I say, borderline neglectful.
Yuck. Seriously, it takes 10 minutes.
if your bath takes 10 minutes no wonder you do it every day.
pp-he's circumcisedAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is a little gross to me because children this age cannot wipe themselves correctly yet and gunk is just building up. DS had his foreskin get "stuck" due to not pulling it far enough back to be cleaned and all that sweat and skin made it like super glue.
Just FYI you aren't supposed to pull a foreskin back to clean it until it has fully separated. clean it like a pencil!
Anonymous wrote:As long as they don't smell, who cares?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so jealous-- my 2 yo insists on a nightly bath. He's not even dirty!
You're obviously making bath time too much fun!![]()
Sometimes I pretend to forget about it - I'm like "it's pajama time and time for a good night book!" It only worked once. He'll remind me that "Mommy, first is bath time." THANKS DUDE I WAS TRYING TO AVOID IT. I don't even shower every day, why should he? That's what baby wipes are for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kids take weekly baths. Sometimes we miss one and go 10 days. They seem fine.
+1
Whatever
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is a little gross to me because children this age cannot wipe themselves correctly yet and gunk is just building up. DS had his foreskin get "stuck" due to not pulling it far enough back to be cleaned and all that sweat and skin made it like super glue.
Just FYI you aren't supposed to pull a foreskin back to clean it until it has fully separated. clean it like a pencil!
Anonymous wrote:Our kids take weekly baths. Sometimes we miss one and go 10 days. They seem fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And what about summer when they go to the pool? Do they sleep with chlorine all over their skin/hair?
You do realize that not everyone belongs to a swim club and has kids that go swimming every day or even every weekend in the summer, right? Rich people are so clueless.
When our kids go swimming we skip baths. Chlorine kills the germs.![]()
This has to be a joke, right? I can't imagine any parent putting their kids to bed smelling like chlorine. It dries up the skin and hair as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And what about summer when they go to the pool? Do they sleep with chlorine all over their skin/hair?
You do realize that not everyone belongs to a swim club and has kids that go swimming every day or even every weekend in the summer, right? Rich people are so clueless.
When our kids go swimming we skip baths. Chlorine kills the germs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny here and I wouldn't work for a mother who refused to bathe her children but once a week. I would be embarrassed to take the children out.
It's not a matter of refusing to do it. It's about having other things to do. If you're a nanny, bathe them yourself. The fact that you couldn't think of that solution yourself and would rather quit makes me somehow think the parents lucked out on that one.
Anonymous wrote:7-10 days is just lazy...and dare I say, borderline neglectful.
Yuck. Seriously, it takes 10 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:this is a little gross to me because children this age cannot wipe themselves correctly yet and gunk is just building up. DS had his foreskin get "stuck" due to not pulling it far enough back to be cleaned and all that sweat and skin made it like super glue.