Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Family invites themselves to baby’s arrival

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy

Dear Amy: My fiance and I are expecting our first child next month. During a visit three months ago, his mother declared that she would be present for the birth. At that point, we hadn’t even discussed the baby’s delivery, let alone visitors at home or at the hospital.

We agreed to this, but now I’m resentful of her declaratio­n and also stressed over the idea of his large family being with us during those early days.

I don’t like to be crowded when I’m stressed, and he has a large and tight-knit family.

I know they want to welcome our daughter into the world and to help out, but I’m not looking forward to it.

I want to breastfeed in private and bond with my new family without people breathing down my neck.

I thought I could compromise by stipulatin­g that adults are welcome, but the young children are not.

I told this to a friend, who said I was being selfish to exclude the children and that they would resent this for years to come.

Am I being selfish? I know there’s a whole “no visitors” movement by moms putting their foot down because of the stress family can add after bringing a new baby home. I’m here for it.

— Expecting in AZ

Dear Expecting: As long as visitors (young and older) are healthy, they don’t pose a risk to your newborn, but your physical, mental and emotional health is paramount.

Yes — these early days are vital bonding times for your little family.

My personal insight and advice to you is that you have a short time to quiet outside voices, grow a backbone and be in charge of your life and your baby’s early days.

If you have told your mother-in-law that she could be “present for the birth,” then I suggest that you rescind this immediatel­y. You can say, “As the date gets closer, I’m more aware of what I need, and I definitely need privacy during the early days. Let’s FaceTime with you on the delivery day and then schedule a visit for after that, once we’ve adjusted.

The time when you might need and welcome the most “help” is when the baby is three or four weeks old. Your partner should work with you to schedule visits and to be a gatekeeper regarding his clan. This is an important role, and it is one way he will protect his new family.

Once you establish your feeding routine, your confidence and patience will grow. Give yourself time and give your partner’s family the benefit of knowing that when it comes to you, they need to respect your boundaries.

Dear Amy: I’m torn between attending a memorial service and a profession­al conference. I know the memorial service should take precedence, but the service is for someone I barely know.

My husband’s family went camping every year with about five other families. His parents’ generation has continued to see each other regularly, and my husband’s generation generally only does this for big events.

I met this friend “Barry” only once, briefly, and about 10 years ago. His wife has died. Neither my husband or I had ever met her. If this event were any other time, I would go and participat­e fully, but my two-day profession­al conference is important to me.

My husband has told me that I can go to the conference, and he’ll bring our kids with his parents.

I think a memorial service would outweigh any profession­al event. However, since neither my husband or I are close to the grieving person, can I choose a work event that is really important, and not feel guilty?

— Torn

Dear Torn: Your husband and children will be flying the family flag at this memorial event.

He will pass along your condolence­s. You could follow up with a note to the grieving husband, expressing your regrets.

Dear Amy: I liked your comprehens­ive response to “Nice Guys Finish Last,” the delusional landlord who wanted his tenants to thank him for basically doing what landlords are supposed to do.

I’ve been a landlord for many years. Peaceful tenants paying rent on time is all the appreciati­on that this landlord needs.

— Grateful

Dear Grateful: Exactly.

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