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Congrats 6793026. 44 hours in the hospital sounds miserable especially for wifey. I hope everyone is atleast settled in at home now and enjoying (or surviving) new born life. To share some personal experiences, I agree with other users that the insistence on breast milk is somewhat overboard. Similarly, my wife had issues with producing milk in the start. Amongst other things, post-partum, it spiralled her mental health, especially being a new parent. We looked into the tongue tie thing as well, but eventually our little guy figured it out before we pursued anything further. However, the above experience, atleast in my opinion, could've been avoided if they weren't so pushy on the whole breast milk ideology. As a result of all of this, my wife pumped like crazy over the first 6-8 months after birth, thinking our little guy would starve. My little guy stopped taking to the bottle after the 3rd month, so here we are with a stockpile of frozen milk that probably is no longer usable lol. I know it's easy for us guys (aka the husband) to say don't worry about it, but I can only imagine the mental anguish a mother goes thru when something so essential and primitive to human life, she cannot do. |
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If I have 2 kids, I'd still send both to daycare. If I have 3, then it gets too expensive, and I'd say one of the parents should just become a full time stay-at-home parent to look after the kids. Plus at that point with 3, there are enough of them to learn socialization together. |
If you want to take care of the kid and work from home, expect to get approximately 1 hour of work per 8 hour day, MAX. |
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My son is turning 6 in Sept. He's in his last day of kindy today. He only can self entertain for 70% of the day until recently. Before that he'll be constantly needing attention. I still had to tell him to go away cause I was trying to solve a technical problem and he kept babbling in my office :badpokerface: My daughter is 2.5y old. She is roughly 40% independent in that she can focus and play for pretty good stretches which is a lot better than my son (girl boy differences). But then she's also stopped napping at home and 1-2pm when the nap bug hits is very taxing for us. So it's great to be able to spend time with them, send them to daycare unless you don't have work. Quote:
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When wifey and I learned we were expecting, I was WFH full-time at that point in time. Wifey initially thought it would be OK if I didn't take any parental leave since I was able to WFH and my job was pretty flexible. It was only my manager who insisted I take time off that made me decide to take the first 6 months off. In hindsight, I sure am glad I took that advice. We were living in a 1BR apartment so when I eventually returned back to work, it was manageble at first but when they start becoming mobile it was quite the task to balance working but also keeping my little guy entertained, regardless of the size of the space. Long story short, similarly to you, I thought by being able to WFH we could save some money on child care and such. Now that I am in the thick of it, I do not believe that is possible, even if both parents are WFH. Fortunately, right now, wifey is staying at home to be able to provide child care. But even then, there are times where it becomes too much for her and she needs a break, even if she doesn't say she does. |
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So the advantage of daycare really picks up after that point. Before then, there's a lot of positive effect from focused & undivided interaction w/ adults. That's not necessarily realistic though. I thought about taking off work til both kids hit 2.5 years old but damn, that's a serious sacrifice. |
Most daycares -- at least here in Vancouver -- don't take children younger than 2.5 yrs old though. And I agree that when the child is too young -- let's just use 3 yrs old as tthe watershed age, even though we all know it isn't black and white, the socialization benefits from daycare isn't really there. |
Wow. So then who takes care of the kids?! Parental leave maxes out at 1.5 years here in Canada (and even then, with the last 6 months unpaid), I thought? |
My kid was in daycare at 10 months. |
I think it's more like some don't take kids below 3y and not that most don't - it's to do with staffing levels that are required I think so some opt not to do it. When I was shopping around we applied at 3 daycares and all of them took them in but we were specifically looking for those of course but just walking around my neighbourhood I see home daycares that don't do it. |
Yeah I think in earlier ages you need to have either 3 or 4 kids to teacher ratio and once they hit 2.5/3 it’s 6 kids to teacher. |
Any of you in a parents group chat with your kids classmates? I find it fascinating that despite the dad's being reasonably present with stuff like drop off, pick-ups, and field trips that the group chat is pretty much 98% the mom's talking. My wife has become friendly with a number of mom's and this seems true for most of the mom's but the dads are all arms length - most of us barely know the names of each other. I found the same with our daycare parents chat - not a peep from the dads in that group. I suppose this is stereotypical of the personality of men and women and also the default roles of parents - the mom's are just parent #1 especially when the kids are young. |
Yeah, the provincial rules for looking after children under 3 is a ratio of 1 adult staff to 4 children, whereas the rules for those from 2.5 yrs old and up is 1:8. The qualifications of the childcare provider (staff) is also higher for someone looking after children under 3 yrs old. https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/f...sed-child-care Back when I was looking for daycare (about 6 months into the pregency), I think only 1 out of all the places I called was willing to take a child under 3 years old, with another one willing to take children at 2.5+ yrs old. Mind you, I wasn't specifically looking for places that take children under 3 -- I was just calling all the licensed non-home based places that I found. And at the time (before COVID), none of the places where I was put on the waitlist had space available before my kid turned 3. Potentially because the overwhelming percentage of places that I called only took 3+ yrs old kids in, most of these places also required the child to be potty-trained. I think only 1 or 2 places were OK with taking in non-potty trained children. Of course every single one of them was OK in dealing with "accidents". |
What is there to talk about in a group chat with my kids classmates parents? My kids teacher gives us a list of phone numbers at the start of the year (opt-in obviously) so people can call or text for birthdays or play dates but that's it afaik. |
There's actually plenty places that take under 3, but for us it was the trouble of segregating the age groups. A 18m old plays very differently from a 4 year old. A lot of places mix the classes and we didn't want that. There are also municipal rules regarding daycares. Burnaby has more defined rules so there's less mix age operations. The daycare situation is Vancouver proper is terrible. Burnaby and Richmond has a lot more options. |
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You get to watch a parent ask if there's school this week. They got report cards 2 weeks ago. Awards were handed out last week on the last day of classes. |
All the moms are in a group chat and are always dishing the hot goss. We are all on RS talking shit instead. I think we are the weird ones lol. |
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I'm not a very social person and don't make new friends easily but I wouldn't mind making friends with a few dads at school because none of my own friends have kids the age of my kid. So far I've only met one that I like but our two kids don't seem interested in each other. Quote:
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https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...qcGc@._V1_.jpg normally don't post here, but as a dad now, it's funny watching this with my wife. 2 seasons, 8 episode and 6; ghetto tough family getting things in line to raise a child. Funny, sad, weird, cringe, but yet so down to earth real on how the two trying to make things work. gosh it's so real that it's refreshing. Really does put things into perspective. Inlaws - mother groups - gender LGBTQ - surrogacy child - cheating - office politics... nothing all too too deep into each but it does cross pollinate. Season 1 and 2 was awesome (and that's it for the series.) |
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I'm envisioning a live, hybrid version of "RS Parental" Thread x "What Did You Do To Your Car Today" Thread lol. Like instead of "I got a brand new lower control arm off RockAuto for $35!", it's "I found a $50 cantilever sun shade at Costco for the kiddo's water table, and it actually hasn't crushed anybody so far. Except for that one time. But he walked it off." |
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I became a parent when I was 33 years old, which at the time was considered old, but is now considered young. I am seeing peers and friends having babies in their 40s and while they may have more experience in life, they're more tired and probably more stressed than I was when I was in their position in my early 30s because I was a bit more naive about life. We had 1 car for a while and we moved further away when we had kids. We sacrificed a lot in those early years. We were pretty modest with our baby gear as well - we never bought more than Ikea furniture and didn't get sucked into the Uppababy hype. Aside from daycare expenses (which do hurt, NGL) kids are really only as expensive as you want them to be. It's the parents that feel the need to keep up with the Joneses. |
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Also, couldn't agree more with that last statement... Kids do not need much after you cover their basic needs. While every familial situation is different for child care, as long as they are healthy and happy, they really just need want your love and attention, which doesn't cost a dime unless you're a shitty person. If you scour marketplace, you can get some real good finds for affordable prices and even free stuff if you are lucky. |
13 k each time with 6 k medication. It was the pain that my wife coudln't bare (even if it was just needles), i said F it. I can't fathom / see you being in pain each time doing these treatment. After 3 tries, we said no more. (I also said i ain't re mortgaging to just do IVF). When i was 33, i would have been naive and be divorced by now, now that i'm 45, i'm just glad i still have decent energy to take care of a newborn. My wife is 41 and it's taking a toll in lack of sleep. Kids are expensive cause we parents are expensive. WTF is lovevery black and white cards... ididn't get them and I still did ok. I never had the $200 Lovevery play gym.. how is that diff than aliexpress.. FFS. |
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