This actually happened over the holidays, but I just can't let it go. I need some insight as to whether or not I'm overreacting.
DH has an aunt who lives in town. She watches Miles about once a month in the evening so we can have a date night. It has been lovely. She's been doing this regularly since she moved to town last April, and she refuses to let us pay her, which is even better.
Anyhow, in the course of conversation, DH's aunt tells me that once while she was baby-sitting and Miles was teething, she put vodka on his gums. And then didn't tell me about it. I was furious, but didn't say anything right away because DH announced dinner, and the whole subject got dropped.
I've talked with DH, and he doesn't feel like it was a big deal - we'll just ask her not to do it in the future, and she won't. But what bugs me is that she didn't tell us about it, and now I feel like I can't trust her to watch Miles. Am I being ridiculous? Or should I stick to my guns and only allow supervised visits for awhile?
Re: Would this bug you? [Longish]
Hmmm...I think that I would be upset too. I am kind of overprotective about my DD at times. But, since she did it to help your DS, I would just let it go. If she did something like, gave him a pickle to try to see what his expression would be or let him cry in his crib when she fell asleep on the couch or something, then definitely, I wouldn't trust her. And, like the PP said, it was something that people used to do. I would probably feel the same way you do! But, I think as long as you trusted her prior, you can trust her again. Good luck! Oh, and I love your son's name!
I'd be mad. Not only that she didn't tell you but that she didn't ask beforehand. I don't care that this was what they did "back then", you'd have to be living under a rock to know that times have changed. And frankly, I wouldn't want someone watching my child who seriously was that behind the times that they wouldn't even think to ask.
That said, was this the only issue? If that is the case, I think it warrants a serious sit-down about what is acceptable and what is not. I mean, she shouldn't even administer Tylenol without an ok from you. Never mind alcohol! So, sit calmly with her. Explain what the issue is. Explain what you would consider acceptable teething relief, etc. See how that goes.
I also agree with this, stressing the part about how her intentions were to help DS. It's not like she gave him a lollipop b/c she used to give her own kids lollipops at that age and she thought it would be fun. She really did mean to help his pain. A talk and a list should do the trick. I think supervised visits would be overboard. Also, she didn't realize it was something that would upset you so much, or else she wouldn't have casually mentioned it, so I don't think she purposefully hid it from you. Therefore, I don't think trust is an issue.
Yes, that would bug me.. BIG TIME. But, it was common back then and maybe she still thinks so. However, she should have asked beforehand.
If you think she is receptive and would not do it again, ask her. If not, tell her. And, I might add that you wish she had asked beforehand.
Incidentally, my dad gave my sister a sip of whiskey (don't ask!) and she got up and walked across the room. Back then, giving a child a nip of alcohol I guess was not scorned on. Ugh!
My feelings exactly.
She made a parenting type decision you don't agree with while he was in her care. These things happen. It's not like she gave him a bottle of vodka. She didn't endanger the life of your child.
I completely agree with this.
No, it wouldn't bug me. Honestly, it was a minuscule amount of alcohol. My DS probably gets that much when he takes holy communion at church.
She didn't do it with malicious intent. She didn't hide it from you purposely. She probably didn't tell you because she didn't think anything of it. As previous posters have said, it was very common practice for many, many years. I disagree that people should know better, it is one of those ingrained home remedies that actually works. Ask her not to do it again and tell her what you would prefer her to do. If she ignores your request, then you can be angry.
Okay. I apparently over-reacted. Thought as much.
Although, to clarify, she specifically told me that she had hid it from me because she thought it would upset me. That's the part that bugs me.
Yes, that is very bothersome.
See this is what bothers me, because it shows that she knew/thought it could be a wrong decision... or a parenting decision she knew you wouldnt agree with........ like spanking or smacking a kids hands when they touch something you don't want them to if either of those are something your against as a parent. The smacking hands is "minor" like a "once and done vodka on gums" but things like that add up.
THAT is wrong. If she knew it would bother you and did it anyway, then you need to have a serious talk with her. I'd be afraid she would do something again that she knew I wouldn't agree with.
To be clear, did she intentionally not tell you before, as in was she hiding it? Or did she just think it was a normal thing to do so she didn't mention it? Do you trust her judgment on other things regarding DS? Do you think this is just a generational issue? If you think it's just that she's from a different generation and would never do it again, I would let her watch DS again but have a talk beforehand and leave specific written instructions in the future. I'd also be really clear that she should never medicate him in any way without getting in touch with you beforehand. While I would be livid about the vodka, I think it's also important to consider whether this might be a generational issue and whether or not she's open to adjusting her caretaking style and doing things your way. While this is bad, these types of things will happen in life and it's not as if she was really endangering him by like giving him a teaspoon of vodka. It seems to me that this was at some time a common practice, so I can excuse it somewhat.
Actually, based on this, I probably would not feel comfortable with her babysitting again. What else might she keep from you? Transparency is important when selecting a caretaker for your children.
BFP #1 9/7/10, EDD 5/14/11, Violet born 5/27/11.
BFP #2 4/9/12, EDD 12/16/12, M/C Rory 4/24/12.
BFP #3 10/6/12, EDD 6/16/12., Matilda born 6/17/13.