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Wedding Woes

no more babysitting

Dear Prudence,

I am a stay-at-home mom of three, including a toddler. My husband works from home. We often volunteer to take on various other children if their parents are in a pinch. My sister complains that we refuse to take her 7-year-old son anywhere and will only watch him at our home. My nephew has severe ADHD, and my sister refuses to medicate him.

He has the attention span and instincts of a golden retriever that just saw a squirrel. He will run off at the drop of a hat, which includes running into traffic. This has happened more than once. If I don’t have a firm grip on him, he will bolt. He has run out of shops, run away at the beach or the park, and once, when we were taking my child to the doctor, he ran away to go see the geese in the pond and nearly got bitten for his troubles.

My sister will blame me for not “watching” him properly. He doesn’t listen, doesn’t obey, and he has no sense of survival instincts! He is 7. My 5-year-old understands to stay with mommy and the cart when getting groceries and going into the parking lot. At home, my husband can give me another pair of hands, and we have a locking gate. I am tired of the frustration, worry, and frankly, my sister’s ingratitude. I finally told her that to consider us off her child care roster—she can find a babysitter to scream at instead. That led to more screaming, and I hung up on her. I am getting pushback from my family because my sister has it so “hard” as a single mom. (Her ex is rich and pays alimony.) She has a part-time job because she claimed she was too bored when her son started school.

I am at the point that I am agreeing with my husband no more babysitting unless someone is in the hospital. I am tired of this. Is there any other way?

Re: no more babysitting

  • Tell the people criticizing you for not sitting to do it.

    There comes a point where you can say that you are not equipped to do it.  Phrase it as that - 'due to his behavior I am not equipped to handle him and my kids at the same time and it's a disservice to his safety and your peace of mind to do this." 

    Let her be frustrated.  

  • Hold the line. "I'm not able to offer the kind of child care she's looking for."
  • ei34ei34 member
    Knottie Warrior 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    Yeah the family who feel LW should help out, should step up instead. 

    Sounds more like autism than ADHD (which I know sometimes includes an impulsive piece sometimes). A runner needs special precautions and many of my students have actual aides at home, since the parents often have other kids to juggle. That thought aside, nephew needs more support than he’s getting and it’s absolutely not LWs job. Hold the (reasonable) boundary you made.
  • ei34 said:
    Yeah the family who feel LW should help out, should step up instead. 

    Sounds more like autism than ADHD (which I know sometimes includes an impulsive piece sometimes). A runner needs special precautions and many of my students have actual aides at home, since the parents often have other kids to juggle. That thought aside, nephew needs more support than he’s getting and it’s absolutely not LWs job. Hold the (reasonable) boundary you made.
    You make a good point.  Perhaps as he ages there will be more feedback from educators too. 
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