Jump to content

Recommended Posts

In the absence of a mother of my own, i always seek advice when needed from a work colleague , now retired , from a big east end fAmily


She has grNd children and great grand children


But actually she only had 3 children


It suddenly occurred to me that now on baby 4 I probably have more experience than most


Scary!

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/16805-when-are-we-experts/
Share on other sites

expert at what? every baby is different everyone has their own preferred parenting style. my mum told me not to breast feed and to add extra scoops of powder to formula. she did that for my brother and i . if i had relied on her advice it conflicted with friends in london.

i dont think you can be an expert, you can just relay your experinces. i expect you liked your colleague and had confidence in her. on the other hand if you successfully breast fed all your children and are a mifwife too then you might be a babyfeeding expert?

the forum is a great place to share experiences. keep it going.:)

I remember when I was interviewing a nanny for my eldest daughter, now 6, when she was 10 months old. I remember the nanny having 5 years experience with childcare and I said to my husband that this was not enough. My husband then pointed out the fact that we only had 10 months of experience with childcare. Needless to say, we hired her! I myself now have a whopping 6 years in childcare experience with three children and it sounds like nothing.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Have you read the OP?
    • I would go out of my way to avoid it if I knew where it was 🤣
    • Eh? I'm not sure whose post you are responding to, but if it was mine, you  "clearly do not know how much it costs"? I have two granddaughters who have frequently stayed with my partner and myself in London, since the younger one was four. I wasn't commenting on the cost of taking children out in London. I was asking exactly what a holiday science club was doing with the children to warrant charging £242 for five hours! You "clearly" did not read my post!  You don't have to take children on expensive outings. As you say, there are plenty of free/cheap  things for children to do in London, and children enjoy choosing things to go in their packed lunch which they can carry themselves in a little backpack. As for buying toys etc, you can give them pocket money at the start of their stay, to spend how they want, and if they make poor choices and then run out of money, it's a learning experience, isn't it. And I suspect I am at least as old as you, and quite possibly older! But in any case, Pugwash was not asking for general comments, s/he was asking for specific suggestions for a specific boy with specific interests.
    • Has anyone else noticed the new King Charles 3 Post box in East Dulwich? Let's see who spots it first!
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...