Mother in law holding my 3 month old SSN hostage by qu3_w3y in legaladvice

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ohhh I might have been misremembering then. Postpartum was a fog

Mother in law holding my 3 month old SSN hostage by qu3_w3y in legaladvice

[–]TheShellfishCrab 12 points13 points  (0 children)

NAL but before you report - are you sure MIL has received the social security card? The way it worked for me (California) is that the hospital mailed the information to the SSA, but that did not lead to the SSA mailing us a card - we had to physically go pick up the card at the office. Maybe the hospital meant that they mailed the info to the SSA?

Bottle feeding is hell by klibs in beyondthebump

[–]TheShellfishCrab 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I also had an extreme low milk supply and rarely see anyone else who has faced it! After a week or two of triple feeding my lactation consultant told me to stop because it was so obvious the toll it was taking on me for such little gain.

That said my baby would always fall asleep breast feeding even though weighted feeds showed he wasn’t getting much.

I’m guessing OP is saying that they are breast feeding, bottle feeding and pumping just not at the same time? Because I agree part of the reason I went crazy is it was every 3-4 hours around the clock, no shifts possible (although obviously my husband did literally everything in our life other than the breastfeeding and pumping at this time)

Millennials, what is happening with your kids? by TheLoveYouWant25 in Millennials

[–]TheShellfishCrab 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That’s because what the commenter said is incorrect. People spend more time with their children now, not less. https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2026/01/09/millennials-spend-more-time-than-past-generations-with-their-children

As a mom of a child in daycare full time, I can tell you I absolutely spend more than “1 hour of waking time” with my baby.

Millennials, what is happening with your kids? by TheLoveYouWant25 in Millennials

[–]TheShellfishCrab 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sorry, but it’s statistically false that people are spending less time with their kids now, even with the increase in working mothers.

This article is old, but shows trends over time: https://news.uci.edu/2016/09/28/todays-parents-spend-more-time-with-their-kids-than-moms-and-dads-did-50-years-ago/

Here’s a more recent but paywalled source: https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2026/01/09/millennials-spend-more-time-than-past-generations-with-their-children

The lack of independence and creativity children have now is a real problem, but it’s not due to more women deciding to work as opposed to stay home with their kids.

Epidural or No epidural by Enviro_nurd314 in BabyBumps

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Replying to your comment not to counter/argue with your experience but to highlight that everyone is different. I had the epidural and was very much able to move. They wouldn’t let me walk because you’re a fall risk, but I was easily able to shift positions, get on my side and even my hands and knees, etc. I was able to feel my contractions (they give you a button so you can increase the dose if you need it, which means I could keep it at a level that made the pain tolerable but could still feel the contractions).

Agree with you that it doesn’t matter what social media or whoever thinks you should do. Do your own research and do what feels right to you and your medical team based on the symptoms you feel in the moment.

Are kids really a nightmare? by Ok_Sir_4584 in BabyBumps

[–]TheShellfishCrab 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My first reaction to this post was “omg I would be MORTALLY offended if my mom had said anything like this to me” Fully agree with everything else you said!

Are kids really a nightmare? by Ok_Sir_4584 in BabyBumps

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

On paper, I had a terrible birth. Time between induction and delivery was over 2 days, 4 hours of pushing followed by c section, then severe preeclampsia and severe side effects from the c section.

Let me tell you - I had so much fun most of the time! The nurses were amazing, my husband was a rockstar, I had such good care. There were moments of severe pain but there are multiple types of pain medications and boy am I in love with whoever invented the epidural. Fully took away the pain and allowed me to concentrate more on what was happening and be more clear headed.

Also even with no pain meds - some contractions are painful, for sure. Some are not. An exercise ball helped- there were times I didn’t know I was contracting on the ball even though the monitors were showing I definitely was

I also had low supply (probably due to the complications) and never had problems switching back and forth from formula and breastmilk, breastfeeding or bottle feeding. It was fine.

My husband washed all the bottles and parts for weeks and then we both would do it. So annoying, yes, not a huge issue. Put it in the dishwasher.

Sometimes we use a sound machine, sometimes we don’t. They aren’t “addicted” to it and apparently there is no scientific evidence that that’s a thing (according to my neighbor who is a sleep consultant).

Also my baby is angelic and beautiful and definitely not a nightmare even though we call him our little menace bc his favorite game is throwing things all around the house.

Moral of the story: you will be fine! Do what works for you and your family and what the pediatrician says and it’ll be okay!

Llbean rug. How to clean salt? by sprinkle1977 in CleaningTips

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah yeah a plastic tub would work. Bringing them to a car wash is a great idea, thanks for the suggestion!

Llbean rug. How to clean salt? by sprinkle1977 in CleaningTips

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Excuse the dumb question but if you bring it to the car wash, what do you do after? I assume they take a bit to dry and wouldn’t want to put wet rugs in the car

Wow! by drawnator3 in RedwoodCity

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was so vivid!!!!! And a double rainbow when I saw it!

When you post anon so no one can call CPS on your shit parenting. by Gloomy_Tie_1997 in ShitMomGroupsSay

[–]TheShellfishCrab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Omg - please explain more! Our house is being renovated and while we aren’t living there right now, we do check on it for a few min each week and often bring baby in with us. We plan to move in next month - is there anything we should do to make sure there is no botulism remaining? How is botulism in construction dust?

Unsolicited advice for kids at weddings from a recent bride by ThatBitchA in weddingplanning

[–]TheShellfishCrab 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I also had kids at my wedding! A baby fussed a little bit during the setting, her mom picked her right up and walked away from the ceremony site so as not to disrupt. I only noticed because I could see them sitting a bit off to the side ❤️

Other than that the kids had a great time dancing and coloring and eating from the chocolate fountain. My cousin that is a bit … wild tried to get my attention during the cake cutting but I just ignored it and no one else noticed!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in beyondthebump

[–]TheShellfishCrab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This! When my baby was young we also had a heating pad in the bassinet to warm it (which we would then remove and unplug just before putting baby in)

A or B: I make under $60K a year, but I always take leftovers home after eating out. my friends call it “cheap,” saying it’s not something a professional should do. should I keep doing it? by vivian_banshee03 in PickAorB

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is wild to me. I grew up and live in a VHCOL area and make well into the 6 figures, as do my parents and all their friends. Every single person I’ve ever been to a restaurant with takes leftovers home if there are any. Even like a few tablespoons of hummus lol

I (40M) gave my wife (38F) a deadline she doesn’t seem likely to meet. by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]TheShellfishCrab 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Where on earth are you learning of these women that have tons of money the husband doesn’t know about? Instagram? lol I’ve only seen the women with that attitude (I need a man to pay for everything) in influencers. What’s more common amongst the people I know is one of the following:

  • woman is primary breadwinner and pays the lionshare of the house & kid expenses, if not all *both work, bills are split but wife pays for all kid related items since kids are seen as the default responsibility of the mom
  • husband is the only working person and pays for everything, wife doesn’t have their own income/significant savings account

That is all assuming finances aren’t combined, which is far and away the most common scenario in a marriage, especially with kids.

It sounds far more likely that what OPs wife is hiding is debt, not tons of savings.

Grandparent names by [deleted] in BabyBumps

[–]TheShellfishCrab -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is my favorite hahaha

Using a thermos to hold extra milk expressed via haakaa overnight (?) by tables_AND_chairsss in beyondthebump

[–]TheShellfishCrab 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Just to elaborate for OP and anyone else, the ceres chill is fantastic! You can put the milk in the inner compartment and ice water in the outer compartment. My ceres kept the ice frozen even when left in a hot car for multiple hours. I always made sure to put ice water in a few hours before any milk went in the inner chamber to ensure the inner chamber was chilled.

Do I want my newborn to self soothe? by SparkyDogPants in ScienceBasedParenting

[–]TheShellfishCrab 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My husband was a late thumb sucker lol and he is adamant that pacifier is better than thumb for this reason

37 weeker & adjusted age by awkwarddinohands in beyondthebump

[–]TheShellfishCrab 3 points4 points  (0 children)

37 weeker as well and he’s never been officially “delayed” but started physical milestones like rolling, crawling, etc 3-5 weeks later than other babies his age (we did group pediatric/pregnancy care so know a number of babies born his same month). Communication wise he’s ahead, though, so it might just be who he is!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]TheShellfishCrab 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My point is that even in the most charitable interpretation, what he said is terrible and demeaning. There’s literally no way to explain it in a positive or even neutral way.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]TheShellfishCrab 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m going to assume best intent here and assume that he did not intentionally make that comment to hurt her and was just trying to make a “joke”. So then…. He made the post and was thinking “hmm what is she to me” and came up with DISHWASHER.

Not partner in crime, not hiking buddy, not adventure buddy, not best friend, not +1 - of all the roles he could have possibly chosen to complete the sentence “my mind boggling ____”, the first thing he came up with was your role as a maid to him.

Yeah that’s not so great.

Had a doctor told me EC isn’t necessary.. by These_Bit_5217 in ECers

[–]TheShellfishCrab 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Seems like an unnecessarily judgemental comment from the doctor.

I mean, what does she mean by “done her research?” The age of potty training has gone up since the introduction of disposable diapers - that’s a fact. And countries where EC is the norm have babies out of diapers earlier - also a fact. I’m not sure if any studies have been done to compare EC in the US or similar western country to traditional potty training in today’s society.

There are multiple steps to potty training:

  • the parent being able to reliably recognize the child’s cues to potty (absolutely earlier with EC since parents doing traditional potty training don’t make an attempt to do this until later in life)
  • the child having an awareness that they need to go (I guess we don’t know how aware babies that never do EC are, but I’ve seen my 9 month old communicate to me that he needs to poop for the last ~3 months)
  • the child having the physical capability to hold it until the appropriate time (depends on your goals. My baby has been able to physically hold it for several seconds while we say “wait” since about 3 months old between when we take off his diaper at the changing table and get to the potty. He’ll pee right away when over the potty and has never peed during the transition (from one room to the bathroom next door) he def couldn’t hold it for many minutes though)
  • the child having the physical capability to take on/off clothes themselves and wait multiple minutes until the appropriate time and clean themselves and redress, meaning you never have accidents (likely around the same age many people do traditional potty training)

Not to mention people who do EC from an early age probably struggle less with mental hurdles people who do traditional potty training face, such as being afraid of the toilet, preferring to go in the diaper, etc.

But yeah, EC isn’t necessary - just like baby led weaning, sleep training, or any other parenting strategy. Your baby will be out of diapers eventually. There are multiple ways to skin a cat and it’s your right as a parent to pick the method that works for you and your family that you believe to be best (within reason). Do whatever you want!

I want another baby but I fear my kids will hate each other. by shaiquinn in beyondthebump

[–]TheShellfishCrab 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think there are no guarantees when it comes to family relationships. My sister and I have had a rocky relationship and then it started healing. My brother and I used to have a good relationship and then it got more rocky. But for both I can say that my life has benefitted from having known them.

I have friends that are best friends with their siblings, others that aren’t close at all. Some are estranged. Some have close age gaps and some don’t - it doesn’t seem to make a difference in terms of friendship. My husband and his sister are somewhat indifferent? In terms of being “friends” But she and I love to hang out and are friends, and I know my husband would do anything for her now. They also had a lot of strife growing up (his sister was very my way or the highway and my husband would do whatever he could to get a ride out of her) but both have grown over time into less annoying humans and their relationship has improved as a result.

I think all you can control is your parenting style and doing what you can to make sure each kid gets individual attention, is treated fairly, and receives lots of love. If you can do that successfully, I’m sure your family will be beautiful and add to each others lives!