My Solo Journey To Mom #15 Solo pro bono still no work though!

Status
Thread locked. We start a new thread when they have over 1000 posts, click the blue button to see all threads for this topic and find the latest open thread.
1
There's no way she came out of that year on gestational diabetes check up and they told her everything was perfect, and make no changes
she can't take advice or any criticism so whatever they said to her it went in one ear and out the other
If she was at work, or out all day or took them for an hour walk in the buggy , or was flat out cleaning the house all day etc, then fair enough....sit down relax with the 🍫
We all know she hasn't moved off the couch and is back there now for the night watching her friends re runs 🙄
I hope anyone considering getting her would know about:
*Milky mates
*Girls thrown into highchairs, all slouched down when they weren't able to support themselves
*Adult portion food sizes to stuff them to sleep
*Greasy burgers for babies
*Not leaving the house for days
*Hosing them down on seats on cold wet towels inside the bath
*The girls not seeing daylight or getting fresh air for days on end
*Flash from her phone constantly in their eyes
*White noise machine going constantly even driving to Kildare with the white noise machine going in the car
*In 14 mths they've been swimming once, beach once, went to a play centre 3/4 times, went to 1 class that was only suitable for older kids, playground maybe twice
*Never had a night away from the house but Lisas had several
*Plonking them in their bouncers with their bottles Infront of the tv
 
82003F85-37EA-43CE-B1AF-87D59D6436C4.png
notice the time stamp on the message- would you really be celebrating job done and a success after just 14 mins??
 
Anyone I know who used a sleep consultant, whether it was successful or not, spent the rest of the time ENJOYING their time with their kids. Nothing militant about how they patented their children, just desperate for help when it came to sleep. This one would be quite the opposite and I'd be curious to see what she advises outside of nap and sleep time. Example, no fresh air because it stimulates them? No trip to the playground as it cuts onto nap time? I genuinely would be interested. And it would be terribly sad if that was her advice.

View attachment 1736166 qnotice the time stamp on the message- would you really be celebrating job done and a success after just 14 mins??
You would if you wrote it yourself. I dont buy this. Especially when her screengrab and post swiftly appears then on her stories.
 
The poor children 6.30 bed time seems so early at that age . My 6 month old goes down at 7pm
.
My 4 month old goes down at 7pm most nights. He’s usually not long over his last nap of the day at 6.30pm!
And he’s generally tired by 7 due to the fact we’ll have been off out all day, going places and seeing people. Her two can’t possibly be tired after sitting in the house all day long, with only that dullard to talk to.
 
My two babies are horrific sleepers. I have contacted many “gentle” sleep consultants over the last while for help and not one program didn’t involve some level of letting the babies cry. Each to their own, but the word “gentle” is a joke. You’re fooling nobody. It’s sleep training Lisa so call it what it is. Nothing gentle about letting a baby cry whether in the room or not.
 
My 4 month old goes down at 7pm most nights. He’s usually not long over his last nap of the day at 6.30pm!
And he’s generally tired by 7 due to the fact we’ll have been off out all day, going places and seeing people. Her two can’t possibly be tired after sitting in the house all day long, with only that dullard to talk to.
My 16 month old goes down at 6:30/7 sometimes earlier. She naps for 1hr-1.5 at midday-ish. Always on the go and out and about so she’s shattered by bed time.
 
Status
Thread locked. We start a new thread when they have over 1000 posts, click the blue button to see all threads for this topic and find the latest open thread.
Back
Top