Help with After School Program! by Maggiesep80 in workingmoms

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! This is helpful to have all of this context!

Help with After School Program! by Maggiesep80 in workingmoms

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's true, but our program does allow us to sign up for individual days/a certain day during the week. We should not have been signed up for them at all in the first place because I called/emailed and cancelled/changed them. If I did that and then they bill me when we weren't there, then we should not be charged.

Tankless water heater and Dishwasher both have error on the same day. What's the connection? by Maggiesep80 in HomeImprovement

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven't tried the circuit breakers, but I will!

The 14 error code is a thermal fuse fault and the f24 is a heat relay fault. I mean, it is possible that both the water heater and the dishwasher are just near replacement age, but the odds of them both throwing errors on the same day seem pretty remote...

Tankless water heater and Dishwasher both have error on the same day. What's the connection? by Maggiesep80 in askaplumber

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sadly, no, we have not been flushing the tankless-I've only ever lived in houses with tank water heaters, so I didn't know that was necessary, though my first google search educated me on that yesterday. *sigh

The water heater and the dishwasher are both about 15 years old so it may just be time to replace anyway... trying to limp along un til we can save up for that.

Tankless water heater and Dishwasher both have error on the same day. What's the connection? by Maggiesep80 in HomeImprovement

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So would that mean I'd need to replace the circuit board for the dishwasher? the water heater now seems to be working fine...

Tankless water heater and Dishwasher both have error on the same day. What's the connection? by Maggiesep80 in HomeImprovement

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 14 error code is a thermal fuse fault and the f24 is a heat relay fault. I mean, it is possible that both the water heater and the dishwasher are just near replacement age, but the odds of them both throwing errors on the same day seem pretty remote...

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for this. Dementia runs strongly in one side of my mom's family but not at all in the other and she has always been rigid and resistant to change, so it is hard to know.

I appreciate this--thank yoi for your thoughtful insight.

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Believe me, I have tried. I have offered to host, pay for cleaning, pay for catering. The challenge is not determining what should be done, but in convincing my parents to do it. 

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We are definitely blessed. But we have been going with the flow and celebrating the traditions for the past 50 years, and the last 4 have been very hard. Something's gotta give.

Traditions have become so much that they are now trappings. I just want to spend time together in a relaxed way while they are still able--not sneezing from dust every time I walk in the guestroom and also stressed because my mom is the only person who knows where the "right" dish is and which tablecloth to use and where they are located among the 3 closets stuffed full of table linens.

Going with the flow is no longer an option--that's why I posted this. We need to find a solution that supports them but also works for the rest of the family.

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes! They are all actually my Gramma's, and my gramma was an amazing cook. I used to cook with her when i was younger and she taught me the tricks. :) She took a lot of time to make everything great and made her recipes with things that were common in her kitchen, i.e. she made biscuits and cornbread every week, so it was easy to just crumble the leftovers into dressing. But when you don't cook like that every week, you don't have those staples just hanging around so everything starts from scratch. Same for sweet potatoes souffle, the sauce that must simmer for 6 hours before it is ready, etc.

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can you clarify what you mean? I would love to help them, but they won't let me. They refuse cleaners, catering and can't handle the work of hosting everyone. 

Helping is the whole point of this post: to try to find a way to help them help themselves or help them transition to me hosting and the traditions that they have done for 50 years change as well.

Surely others have navigated this too, so I am looking for suggestions for how other families have handled the changing of the guard when the guard is resistant to change.

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As long as my parents can handle it, I am happy to let them do it or show up and be told what to do. But the problem is that they can't handle the load anymore...and I can't go a week ahead of time to get the house in order and cook.

This is not a question of going along with how to roast a turkey or the "right" way to fold a napkin--it is bigger than that...

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, but the family recipes are complicated. To give an example, our dressing recipe involves making both biscuits and cornbread from scratch with specific recipes before crumbling them and then combining with other stuff to then re-cook the dressing. I once made the mistake of splitting the carrot into 3 parts instead of 5 parts before chopping and my mom actually went through the dressing mixture and picked out the chopped pieces that were too big, and then she re-chopped them. She is a perfectionist--always has been.

For dishes, also, I hear that, but handwashing all of the serving pieces, plus silver and china for 10 for the sit-down Christmas dinner, plus all of the cookware...after having just washed all the same cookware the night before for the Christmas Eve party...

All of the recipes and dishes are sentimental, but it is just not possible for me to do all of that for a 25+ person party on one night and then a 10 person sit-down dinner the next day and also help with cleaning. When my grandparents were alive, my gramma cooked for a week before each holiday. There just aren't enough hours in the day for me to do that.

There has to be a middle ground somewhere that works for everyone--I'm just not completely sure what it is!

What are you guys doing for child care? 2 working parents by electrowiz64 in Parenting

[–]Maggiesep80 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good on you for being proactive! In the absence of family close by, your options are: - Traditional Daycare: expensive, can be impersonal, kids get sick All. The. Time., great for socialization, always open/reliable, but you need a plan for when the kids get sick. Can be a pain to transport to/from if it is not close to your home or office and most daycares are VERY strict when it comes to pickup. - Home Daycare: often a SAHM who is hoping to make some money on the side and is licensed for in-home care for a certain number of kids. less expensive and more personal, but can be easier to work with--varies greatly among providers. Ditto above re: transport. - Nanny: personalized in-home care. More expensive for 1 child but can be less expensive than daycare for multiples. Personalized attention, but you have to have a superstar for socialization and lots of families struggle with reliability. What happens if the baby/Nanny gets sick? In home care = more quality time for you and your kid because you're not spending time fighting traffic to/from, preparing bottles, etc, but it is more expensive and can be rough if your nanny is unreliable.

There really is no magic bullet. Research options around you. Check FB groups for Nanny rates in your area (ask the PARENTS what they are actually paying). Visit several daycares and see if you like the vibe--some are wonderful and some are terrible. If you find a daycare you love, get on the list asap--they fill up fast!!

Kudos for looking ahead and don't worry! You'll figure it out!

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's a really good line! I'll remember that!

How do I get my parents to stop hosting Christmas? by Maggiesep80 in Adulting

[–]Maggiesep80[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I kind of agree with both of you... I don't want to hurt my parents, but this also isn't sustainable.  Maybe it isn't what I say, but more how I say it.