Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Why are comments like this ALWAYS the go to when a parent is getting called out on their horrific behavior. You suck as a person. It’s just that simple. Change you attitude and maybe, just maybe, things will get better for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
OP here. I would love to sit in the back, if au pair could drive well (which she also can't do nearly as well as she claimed. I doubt she had ANY regular driving experience before she came here, which she wasn't honest about, but none of them are). But she can't drive well (which is why her driving the second car is ALSO a problem in this situation). And my ill family member can't drive and shouldn't try to squeeze into the back (though she offered!). if a frail elderly person is offering to sit between the carseats (to drive to lunch 15 minutes away, not to drive to California), and the au pair balks, then YES, I have a problem with that. There is plenty of room and a seatbelt. And we were taking her out for a free lunch! Do we need to provide an extra car that she can't drive safely to transport her to a free lunch?!
The entitled au pair trolls on this board are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.
Anonymous wrote:You need to put the two car seats together - one side and one in the middle and give her an end seat at the minimum or you sit back there.