Dear Prudence,
My husband had his twin daughters when he was in college and we had our three when we were in our late 30s/40s. I am a stay-at-home mom and work part-time for a family company that lets me set my own hours. My stepdaughter is pregnant. She wants to immediately go back to work since she is the breadwinner between her and her husband. They don’t want to pay for child care and I would be happy to help out but she treats me like I don’t have a functional brain.
I have been emailed basically a book on what I am not allowed to do with the baby—from sleep schedules to how to hand-make organic baby food. There were footnotes. The baby isn’t even here yet. My youngest is 11. Parenting hasn’t changed that much in a decade. Our relationship has always been challenging. She, unlike her sister, has never responded well to her parents having their own independent lives. She nearly tanked her relationship with her own mother because her mother decided to remarry a man 10 years younger than her and move to Spain (this was after she and her sister both graduated and got married). I understand that she is a nervous new mother-to-be, but I am already regretting the offer. My husband insists it will all be fine. I am not so sure. Help?
—Regretting It