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Integrating a baby into family life

(123 Posts)
Luckygirl3 Thu 05-Mar-26 09:18:38

This is the (to me) extraordinary statement on a thread in Mumsnet: I hold or co-sleep with her about 23 hours a day.

The baby is 4 months old, and the gripe in the thread is that her OH pulled his weight for a while but is now beginning to detach himself from that and the mum is pissed off about this.

I have suggested that she might start settling the baby down on its own at times so that she can become a part of the household again and join with her OH in the day-to-day activities a bit. All the other posters are denigrating this man and saying what a poor show of a partner and father he is.

I am expecting to get flamed!

My babies were used to being settled in their crib from birth almost and by 4 months their daytime naps and nights were the same.

What did others do?

Cossy Fri 06-Mar-26 14:26:28

Madness! I did my own share of using baby carriers and if one of four babies (not all at once) wouldn’t settle, I stuff them in the baby carrier and carry on with housework.

However, all four of mine were in their own cribs next to our bed, then moved into their own rooms at around 16 weeks.

In my humble opinion this (mad) mother is just making a rod for her own back and heaven help them both if they have another baby at any time.

Juicylucy Fri 06-Mar-26 14:25:15

Parenting so different these days. As you say we had routines at an early age. Far too much molly coddling these days. No proper guidance from health care that it’s fine to let a baby cry and self settle.

MaggsMcG Fri 06-Mar-26 14:16:10

Even in gear the whole point of the MumsNet post is being missed. The husband's issue in this scenario is being neglected. This marriage will fail unless she gives jim a chance to share in the baby carrying. How will she know if he can if she won't let him try. If its something she wants to do when he's not there then thats up to her. If I was him I'd go back to work and let her get on with it instead of pandering to her every whim.

MissMellie Fri 06-Mar-26 14:14:28

Unless there is a medical reason for mom to be sleeping/holding baby to thst extent, it is unfair to her partner and co- parent.

Yes, a woman’s body bears the physical work of carrying and birthing a child but the dad is a human being as well and deserves consideration.

My DIL has used childbirth/ infancy as an excuse to throw all other responsibilities onto my son. I’ve watched him nearly kill himself trying to keep her satisfied and all other plates spinning.

4allweknow Fri 06-Mar-26 14:06:25

My goodness I am now feeling I totally neglected by children. How can anyone, at least in the modern world, be attached to a baby for 23 hours. How would the mother in question manage with twins, lugging them around, one maybe asleep, one wide awake. The man involved has some sense at least, just hope the mother develops some too and soon.

Jojo1950 Fri 06-Mar-26 14:04:59

KTSmum.
Agree with you. 💐

Ktsmum Fri 06-Mar-26 13:41:40

Same here, in a crib between feeds and changes, only co sleeping when poorly. If you never let baby go from you, you are making a rod for yoyr own back imo

Deedaa Thu 05-Mar-26 21:28:52

I took over my grandson during the day when he was six months old. By this time he was having a nap in the morning and after lunch. He would sleep in his cot but the after lunch nap was always a challenge. I would sit in the rocking chair with him while he flailed around until he went to sleep. I always called him the Giant Squid. I didn't have his younger brother until he was about a year old, and only having one nap. He would happily sleep on my lap, but I only had to breathe and he was awake again. Actually I was quite happy to spend a couple of hours reading or watching television with a lapful of cuddly baby.

Ilovecheese Thu 05-Mar-26 16:20:53

Although I did more or less what Luckygirl3 did with my own children. I did know that I was lucky enough to be able to stay at home to bring them up for a few years, so would have plenty of time to spend with them.
New mothers nowadays know that they will have to go back to work when the baby is a year old, if not before, and leave their babies in a nursery or with somebody else.
So really, can we blame them for wanting to hold on to their babies for this short time they have together.

Hithere Thu 05-Mar-26 14:38:19

Going through sorry

Sago Thu 05-Mar-26 14:37:15

My SIL was a bit like this, she spent whole days in her dressing gown whilst everyone waited on her.
It wasn’t PND, my MIL always prefixed her name with the word poor.
Drove me mad.

Hithere Thu 05-Mar-26 14:36:03

Yup, too OTT and out of context for everything that person is going on

Luckygirl3 Thu 05-Mar-26 14:31:28

Allira

Hithere

All babies are not the same and mothers adapt too, for their own mental health

Adults, especially mothers, do not appreciate to be told they are not good mothers, that is why older generations are shocked with the strong reactions from younger generations.

Cosleeping does not mean baby is not sleeping on his/her back.

We also do not know the needs of the baby.

Basically, if the partner or medical staff needs to address this arrangement, go ahead

Strangers, back off

Strangers, back off

So why would anyone ask a question about parenting on Mumsnet? confused

Mumsnetters certainly do not hold back their opinions.

All babies are different, well, mine were, but this sounds more like the new mother pushing the new father away then wondering why he is now letting her get on with all the baby care.

Indeed - I just picked out that quote for comment as it seemed so OTT !

Allira Thu 05-Mar-26 14:08:09

Hithere

All babies are not the same and mothers adapt too, for their own mental health

Adults, especially mothers, do not appreciate to be told they are not good mothers, that is why older generations are shocked with the strong reactions from younger generations.

Cosleeping does not mean baby is not sleeping on his/her back.

We also do not know the needs of the baby.

Basically, if the partner or medical staff needs to address this arrangement, go ahead

Strangers, back off

Strangers, back off

So why would anyone ask a question about parenting on Mumsnet? confused

Mumsnetters certainly do not hold back their opinions.

All babies are different, well, mine were, but this sounds more like the new mother pushing the new father away then wondering why he is now letting her get on with all the baby care.

Hithere Thu 05-Mar-26 14:06:55

I found the thread in mumsnet and i highly encourage everyone to read it

It is called "to have expected more of dh post partum"

I believe it is misrepresented here with just one statement on 23 hours a day of cosleeping, there is so much more to it.

Her dh helped for 4 weeks and then stopped. The guy prefers playing video games.

Cabbie21 Thu 05-Mar-26 12:44:55

How times change.
I was a very inexperienced new mum and probably did it all wrong as my first baby was very unsettled, though with hindsight it was probably a form of lactose intolerance. No Mumsnet to turn to for advice.
She slept in a carrycot next to our bed. She did not like being cuddled from about 9 months old. When she woke in the night she would eventually fall asleep in our bed and be transferred back into her cot.

When number two came along he was totally different, a really easy baby. My eldest was still waking up in the night until she was four, so number two slept happily in his big pram in the hall downstairs. Mumsnet would be horrified. He slept through the night from about five months.

Hithere Thu 05-Mar-26 12:23:10

All babies are not the same and mothers adapt too, for their own mental health

Adults, especially mothers, do not appreciate to be told they are not good mothers, that is why older generations are shocked with the strong reactions from younger generations.

Cosleeping does not mean baby is not sleeping on his/her back.

We also do not know the needs of the baby.

Basically, if the partner or medical staff needs to address this arrangement, go ahead

Strangers, back off

RosiesMawagain Thu 05-Mar-26 12:13:27

Are we talking about babies or Mumsnet I wonder?
If the former, fashions and cultural differences in baby care seem to vary enormously.
Some cultures wrap the baby in a shawl sling type thing and carry them around all day while mum performs her domestic tasks etc. others (my mums generation) believed in 4 hourly feeds lying the baby on a different side each time you put them down so that their ears grew flat and if they cried in between feeds, it was perfectly ok to let them cry themselves to sleep.
We and our daughters are somewhere on the scale between these extremes.
One D carried her baby in a sling for most of the day as he slept better upright , no point in pushing him round the streets in his pram, he just cried.
Each to their own and it is neither our business or the bossier mums of Mumsnet to sit in judgement.

Retread Thu 05-Mar-26 12:06:26

Er, all I can say is thank goodness I don't read Mumsnet. It sounds absolutely toxic, and quite prejudiced against men.

62Granny Thu 05-Mar-26 11:59:47

I always tried to settle mine, only one, by putting them down into the crib when she was very young or in the park just outside the kitchen door if the weather was fine, I can't understand people who constantly need to be holding their baby, I remember someone when we were still in hospital who would sit at the side of the baby's cot with their hand resting on the baby inside, I thought she will have problems when she gets home. Babies need to feel safe but not cuddled/ nurses 24/7.

ViceVersa Thu 05-Mar-26 11:59:11

I dread to think what they'd make of my parenting skills on Mumsnet. My two went straight into cots in their own room from the day we brought them home from the hospital. If I had things to be getting on with, into the cot they went. I went back to work full time when they were three months old and they went to nursery or to their grandparents.

Doodledog Thu 05-Mar-26 11:57:52

That baby's face!

S/he is not happy with the arrangement at all grin

Chestnut Thu 05-Mar-26 11:30:10

She should see this from the 1930s. They would hang their babies outside the window in a baby cage to get fresh air!

You can't believe that people would do this, but reading about her velcro baby made me think of this and how things have gone from one extreme to the other.

Doodledog Thu 05-Mar-26 11:12:43

Luckygirl3

I think we all kept our small babies near, but this mum is holding her babies or sleeping with them for 23 hours a day!

But that's what she wants to do. I couldn't have settled mine in their cribs at four months - I wanted to be able to see them, talk to them and so on - but I don't criticise those who did that, as it's not something where one size fits all.

I've known people who enjoyed 'baby-wearing', but that wouldn't have been for me (it sounds as though the MN mum was doing that). Their babies have turned into well-adjusted adults too. I doubt any of it matters too much in the long run, however important it feels at the time.

I agree that it's something she should probably have discussed with her partner, as baby-wearing is quite radical, and if he's not in favour it's going to feel quite exclusive. I'm not sure about cosleeping either. It's almost certainly more 'natural' than putting babies in cots, but I'd worry that a tired parent would roll over and smother the baby.

Ilovedogs22 Thu 05-Mar-26 10:49:16

I always found babies quite easy to integrate into family life. Its rather nice sitting down and feeding them. Even though my toddler would often be creating mayhem! Runnin around with his pants on his head or attempting to kiss the cat!