Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Unsolicited parenting advice

53 replies

TicklishSheep · 29/01/2025 12:44

I’m a FTM to a lovely almost five month old baby boy.

I’m really struggling with the amount of unsolicited advice I’m receiving from both my parents and my in-laws. Every time I see them I get comments about everything under the sun, but mainly about DS’s sleeping and naps. Things like “you just need to put him down”, “crying is good for his lungs”, “you’re spoiling him” (by contact napping, as this is currently the only way he will sleep during the day…trust me, I’ve tried), “why don’t you just put him in his room and see what happens”, and “he should be in his own room” etc etc.

I think it comes from a good place (maybe they think it’s helpful?), but it is starting to really stress me out and make me dread seeing either set of parents to be honest. His sleep is not something I’m worried about so I don’t know why they feel the need to comment at all, let alone repeatedly. DS usually sleeps through the night and has a couple of naps on me or DH or in his buggy during the day. We don’t mind. He’s only four months old and if that’s what he needs to nap at the moment, it doesn’t bother us at all. He’s only little once. Sleep training is not something I’m comfortable with, let alone just leaving him alone to cry.

My usual approach is to say something non committal like hmm maybe. Then just ignore them and hope they get the hint and stop. But the problem is they don’t seem to be getting the hint. I’ve even tried to gently explain why we’re doing what we’re doing (we want to create a secure attachment, SIDS guidelines etc) but the response was oh well see how well that works when he’s 4. But he’s not 4, he’s 4 months old…

There’s been a lot of other “advice” too that honestly I think is dangerous, like we should put whiskey on his gums to help teething, give him an ice block to chew on and so on. Then there’s the comments that are just irritating, like “he doesn’t look tired to me” when we’re trying to get him to nap (he definitely was tired).

Am I being unreasonable (are they just trying to help)? How can I get them to stop or at least cut down on the amount of comments/advice… do I need to be more blunt? I just don’t want to hear it anymore :(

OP posts:
SnakebitesandSambucas · 05/02/2025 20:50

" we are figuring out what works best for us"

" We are happy with our choices"

"No need to advise i got Mumsnet 😉"

Let your partner go round. And you stay home!

FurnellaFurchester · 05/02/2025 20:56

It’s posts like these that make glad of my face. The ‘oh f-off’ is written all over my face immediately, even if my words are ‘thanks, might be worth a go’ 😂 I would be more blunt, op. Just tell them ‘that’s not how we are doing things’ and to the advice that is obviously dangerous just look really shocked and say how glad you are that we know so much more these days.

calvemjoe · 06/02/2025 18:06

I contact napped with my DD3, aware that she was my last and want to grab every second of cuddles before she grew up. She let me know when she was ready to sleep on her own and now, at 8, we have the most amazing bond. I don’t regret a second of those cuddles but with I had of been more relaxed and less stressed about creating ‘bad habits’ with 1 and 2. Follow your instincts and the studies that you have cited ❣️

New posts on this thread. Refresh page