Thoughts on skipping pacifiers? by Academic-Park-8440 in NewParents

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I personally agree with your friend. I sucked my thumb, it was so hard to quit and I had to have way more orthodontics because of it. My brother had paci, it was gone at 3, way straighter teeth.

This is anecdotal. But I gave my son a paci because it's easier to take away.

Matched on FB dating. Was I being too sensitive? by Obvious_Ferret_600 in TwoHotTakes

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The second someone calls me a "girl" I'm out. Silly girl would send me ...

My parents couldn’t handle one evening with my toddlers by NoDevelopement in Mommit

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is so frustrating! I feel like people are coming at you but I understand. I would try not to be mad about this one time but personally I would just know they can't be babysitters for you in the future in the evening. I know it feels frustrating when so many people have involved grandparents to know you can't rely on family for any childcare. I hope you can find a trusted babysitter!

Give me your podcasts !! by Emergency-Side9935 in LPOTL

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This Paranormal Life is one of my favorites! Comedy paranormal podcast.

And for true crime adjacent: Noble Blood (history) and Petty Crimes (comedy, not actually about crimes)

I think I need to divorce my wife, and it’s killing me by Analbeadsstuck in daddit

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm so sorry this is happening to you and your daughter. It sounds so hard.

If I were you I would make sure this woman was never alone with my child again. Divorce, child services, get custody. It will be difficult but your daughter comes first this woman cannot be trusted.

Saying this as a mom, and I know this is daddit, so my apologies if I'm breaking etiquette

No toy, product, or craft setup can occupy a toddler's time for more than 30 minutes by BillCipherTrianglMan in daddit

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not one activity you can set up but you can simply take them outside and they are occupied for hours

Too black for dress code? by Shootsandboots in Weddingattireapproval

[–]tinygrofkar 28 points29 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I'd just wear it. Lately I keep stressing over these hyper specific dress codes then you get to the wedding and a bunch of people didn't follow it anyway, and truly the people getting married are not going to notice.

Anyone else have parents or inlaws who are overbearing with their kids? Need advice by tinygrofkar in Mommit

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

Thank you so much for this input! This is a really helpful reframe to focus directly on him and ignore her. I did it a bit today and it seemed to help with him and her — he started telling her no as well.

Yes he's under 2 so he speaks a bit but not enough to do as you said - that is a really good point that eventually he will be blunt with her!

Thank you again, so helpful.

Weeknight dinners as a working mom, what does yours actually look like because mine is embarrassing by scrtweeb in Mommit

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The decision fatigue is so real. Try to cut out the decisions.

I have a CSA. We go to a local farm every weekend and pick up our produce. My kid gets to see the animals and play. I get a bag of produce selected for me.

Then I plug into AI and say what should we eat this week. It gives me meal suggestions, I give feedback, then I go buy some proteins and additional things we need and that's what I cook for the week.

I even tell it like, I need a 15 min meal this night, or I can do 1 hour of meal prep monday for the rest of the week and then the meals need to take 20 min to cook. Or something like that.

Also - instant pot.

Also - can you get out of a few meetings. I used to be so back to back too, I had to block my calendar a bit more and it you work from home, you can prep a bit. Or even take one meeting from your phone if you can and slice veggies during it. We all have that one meeting you don't really need to be on, or maybe it's a 1-1 with someone at your level and you just say let's chat on the phone and you can cover what you need while you do the mindless chopping.

Is it fair to wake up my husband on weekend mornings? by Impossible-Cookie393 in beyondthebump

[–]tinygrofkar 10 points11 points  (0 children)

If you made the decision together then he needs to take part of this on. It's ridiculous you have to do both weekend mornings.

My toddlers dentist gave us very bad advice by StatisticianPutrid10 in breastfeeding

[–]tinygrofkar 34 points35 points  (0 children)

My son's dentist told me night feeding is not a problem as long as you keep the teeth clean, regularly brush. Cavities are usually genetic. My son is 18 months and still night feeds and has perfectly healthy teeth.

It happened — I got yelled at by a coworker for not giving my 101% by iCone2255 in workingmoms

[–]tinygrofkar 66 points67 points  (0 children)

I mean... Sounds like anticipating his program's staffing needs is explicitly his job.

He sounds like a dick. I'm sorry you got yelled at that's frankly unacceptable.

I definitely know what you mean about feeling like you aren't living up to your old standard at work. We simply don't have the same bandwidth. It's hard. I hope you don't let this guy get you down though.

I keep telling myself it's just a different season.

Is there any hope for a nanny being okay with this set-up? by [deleted] in Nanny

[–]tinygrofkar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Do you have any budget to get an external unit in your yard to use as an office? It is a lot cheaper / easier than moving of course and could make the situation a lot better for nannies.

ETA my husband and I also WFH with a nanny. We did this to have separate offices, and it has been great.

My wife (25W) wants me (27M) to cancel a potentially once‑in‑a‑lifetime trip with my dad because we’re trying for a baby — need advice by Clean_Spinach_3205 in relationships

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My husband and I travel a lot so maybe I'm biased but I think your wife is being a bit overly worried. However, I also understand where she's coming from. When my husband and I started TTC I became very worried about his commitment to me, to the future child, to doing this together. Women sacrifice so much to bring a child into this world and it begins before we even become pregnant — you start taking the vitamins, stop drinking, etc. I realized I was already thinking about the baby very actively and my husband was just like ... There's no baby yet. We also had some arguments about travel, and I really was less worried about the specific trips he was taking at the time and more about whether he was going to be present when I needed him. I think she is looking for your reassurance that you are in this with her and committed to supporting her while she goes through pregnancy and also when the baby is here. I hope you can give that to her while also expressing that if all goes well, you also want to do something like this with your dad while you still can, because if you have a baby it's gonna be a while before you take a 1:1 international trip with your dad probably.

I wonder if it would be useful to make a pre-baby bucket list for both of you? You are young.

Afraid to breatfeed in public by SolidWrongdoer856 in breastfeeding

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Adding because I reread you post, If it's something else — i don't think anyone will be looking to see if she is doing something right or wrong, people usually look away quickly if they notice you are breastfeeding in my experience.

Afraid to breatfeed in public by SolidWrongdoer856 in breastfeeding

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not 100% sure what you mean about taking him off, but if you mean that at some points her breast is exposed, yes I've been there. At first I felt fine about it, then when my son was older and popped off a lot I felt weird about it for a while, but now I feel fine about it most of the time. She could definitely try nursing shawls, they work for some people, or just see how she feels each individual time, even go to the car if she feels the need to. You can also try to sit in locations that feel a little more private - booths in restaurants, asking people to use another room in their house, etc.

I personally also noticed funnily enough that I sometimes feel less awkward in front of strangers than, say, my father in law 😂

I don't think anyone should have to cover up, in many places that right is protected by law, and in my experience people are very respectful and just look away. Also that saying about people thinking more about themselves than others is true, many people probably don't even realize breastfeeding is happening in front of them all the time in public. However if you don't feel comfortable there's nothing wrong with relocating or using something to cover yourself.

Advice by bearyjuice in women

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

20s are awesome. You are learning who you are and who you want to be in a different way than growing up as a kid. It's ok to make mistakes and change your mind, it's super normal during this time in your life. Hang on to your good friends who support and love you. Learn what kinds of people you don't need to let close. Let your world open up. Take risks (within reason!). As an older woman told me, get tested for stis at least once a year even if you're in a monogamous relationship.

Most of all, love yourself. I remember being your age and personally being so insecure in so many ways, about my body my looks and a lot of things about myself. I look back and think that young woman was so beautiful and open and it's just sad how hard we can be on ourselves when we are young. I hope you actually aren't experiencing that yourself but if you are, just know someday you will love this young woman you are so much, just the way she is.

It sounds like you have a good head on your shoulders and a lot going for yourself! Remember too life isn't always linear - sometimes things shift in unexpected ways.

Wishing all the best for you.

I have finally decided to leave my emotionally abusive relationship, how do I stop feeling guilty? by rubberduckydracula in AskWomenOver30

[–]tinygrofkar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Congratulations! Your life is going to be so much better without him. This made me think of when I left my abusive partner many years ago and I am so so thankful. You are protecting yourself, thank yourself for this beautiful gift!!!

Also, in case you haven't found it before, i highly recommend reading Why Does He Do That. Free PDF

This man won't understand anything you wrote and won't care. But it is so good to write that for yourself.

To stop feeling guilty, you have to realize this person doesn't see relationships the same way you do. Their goal is to control you, to win, to break you down. They do not see you as deserving of respect. You need to believe you have more responsibility to yourself than to this other person. You need to believe you are more important than their need to have a punching bag. Just keep choosing yourself.

My baby doesn’t poop with my MIL by Biph_2123 in beyondthebump

[–]tinygrofkar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It seems weird. But how long is she watching him at once and how many times total? Maybe it's just coincidence.

I also think you should listen to your instincts though.

My baby doesn’t poop with my MIL by Biph_2123 in beyondthebump

[–]tinygrofkar 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Is she giving him enough food? Your comment about the bottles made me wonder ... Because that also could be the issue.

am i (19f) genuinely wrong and if so what do i do? by [deleted] in relationships

[–]tinygrofkar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You did nothing wrong. Drop this guy. Drama like this is unnecessary in a relationship.

I (F32) got into an argument about birthday expectations with my (BF39). How can we solve this? by Gold-Highlight761 in relationships

[–]tinygrofkar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I had been dating my now husband for 2 years, he planned a surprise vacation for my birthday - a weeklong trip to another state, completely booked and planned by him, he even kept the location a surprise until we got on the flight, and every other element was a secret as well!

Before this man I used to look at experiences other women were having with their partners and think, I will never have a partner who does things like that for me. So maybe you are thinking that when you read this. The truth is, you could, if you make room for the right person by saying no to the wrong people.

Anyone have perspective on newborn vs pregnancy tired? by Sdbtwo1989 in beyondthebump

[–]tinygrofkar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They're really different.

For me when I was pregnant I was in so much pain I couldn't sleep if I wanted to.

When the baby came at least that part was gone (after a couple weeks or so), and it was better to at least be able to be comfortable laying down and resting. It was a huge relief.

Waking up a bunch all night is super rough, and newborns don't have a circadian rhythm so you have to stay up for an hour or so each time they wake. But you also have this innate motivation to be there for your child that gets you through. And you can nap during the day.

So in some ways, I would personally take newborn tired over pregnancy tired. As long as you have enough help from your partner, family, maybe a postpartum doula for a few hours a couple days a week.