I'm pregnant with babies 3&4 so I know what I have done but I am curious to what others think. Will you let baby control your life or will you have baby be an addition? For example you get invited to a friend's house for a cookout or whatever but you put the baby to bed at 8. Do you go and leave at 8? Do you go and let the baby fall asleep there? Or do you not go? Discuss.                 
                Mom to 10 year old DS and 7 year old DD. Twin girls coming soon!

              
        
Re: Who is in charge, you or baby?
I think there are some good things in babywise (isn't that where eat/play/sleep comes from?) but you may want to take it with a big grain of salt. Aap (among other groups) has expressed concern about some of the advice in it. https://aapnews.aappublications.org/content/14/4/21.abstract
yes thank you. My first needed her naps at home my second slept on the go. Meeting my kids needs has nothing to do with who is in charge. Being a parent isn't always convenient or fun.
I think there are some good things in babywise (isn't that where eat/play/sleep comes from?) but you may want to take it with a big grain of salt. Aap (among other groups) has expressed concern about some of the advice in it. https://aapnews.aappublications.org/content/14/4/21.abstract
Thanks! I don't plan on following word for word. But I don't like the concept better than on-demand feeding so I'm hoping to find a good middle ground.
If DS is a fussy baby, I wouldn't take him out like that. I would, however, feel comfortable taking him to a family dinner at someone's home because the environment is different.
If there is an occasional bedtime conflict we just let her stay up longer or fall asleep at the event. Or we use her as an excuse to leave early or not go.
Then we had you.
Now we are complete.
Yes, this means we have to work around her sleep schedule, but I really appreciate the fact that she's such a great and consistent sleeper at this point (NOT the case for her first year). If we want to enjoy an event that goes much past bedtime, we get a sitter. Most events falling into that category are events I'd rather enjoy sans toddler in tow anyhow, and I think child-free time is important for us individually and as a couple.
To me, having a kid who "calls the shots" means having a kid who lacks discipline and involves parents bending to their child's every whim and desire. Respecting an appropriate schedule for your child doesn't fall into that category at all for me. I also tend to sideeye sources that instruct new parents on how to raise a baby that "fits nearly into the life they already have." Not that YOUR ENTIRE WORLD should = your child, but...kids SHOULD change your life in loads of different ways. I think it's silly to expect or plan otherwise.
Any STB parent who gleefully and naively says "the baby will fit into MY life!" (a la babywise) is in for a rude awakening sooner or later. Babies are selfish and needy, and that's exactly how they're supposed to be!
And it's so true... each kid is unique and has an ever-evolving set of tolerable parameters within which parents can safely tread. My kid DID do well falling asleep other places if it was quiet and dark, but not when it was loud or busy, which opened up doors for us to say yes to certain events. He NEVER transferred from car to house without waking up, so that limited us.
I will expect this new baby to likely be more adaptable than my kiddo, as she will be forced to deal with sharing parents, fitting into the existing family rhythm, enduring loud noises, etc. I think it's very normal for a subsequent kid to have a resiliency that a firstborn often doesn't have.
As for the example given- we would go to a cookout and just plan to leave by 8, but DS's bedtime has always been around 930, so it didn't interfere with much. We will skip naptimes for big things like weddings, birthdays, or holidays.