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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

10 month old DH said i am being lazy.

806 replies

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 10/04/2026 23:18

When DD (10months) wakes, I change her and then give her milk. I then pop her in her playpen where she happily plays with toys. I then make a coffee and watch some TV - play pen is infront of TV (well TV in on wall, playpen is infront of couch). I sometimes just watch her and occassional look up at TV sometimes I will watch the TV. I enjoy having my morning coffee and she is happy playing. After 30mins / 1hr or so I then take her through to kitchen where I give her actual breakfast, porridge, yoghurt, etc.
DH wfh and when walking past livingroom popped head in to say hi. He looks shocked thst I had a coffee and was lying on sofa watching TV. He asked was mummy having a day off and that the play pen isnt for me watching TV and that im being lazy. I was so annoyed. Is he right?

OP posts:
Mintchocs · 11/04/2026 08:47

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 03:06

She used to sleep 11hrs each night but when we transitioned to her big cot that all changed. She now wakes every few hours. She is on 3 meals a day with some milk throughout day (always bottle first thing and before bed, sometimes afternoon, not always). I dont want to cut daytime naps as she never used to nap and that was a fun time lol I have cut them down so they aren't as long.

Honestly don't worry about this. One of mine switched to waking every 3 hours and actually didnt sleep through til he was 3 in the end. Now he looks like a rugby line backer so it all made sense in the end 😁. All babies are different. Don't let people sleep shame you!

Theonethatlurks · 11/04/2026 08:49

I voted YABU and you are asking why so I am happy to explain why I voted this way. I was the same, exactly the same when my twins were 10 months. I watched tv in front of them when they played in playpen and let them watch some when I had to do something. I regret it soooo deeply. At 1 year old development check I was concerned at the lack of certain milestones and skills. The doctors told me ‚zero tv from now on, no excuses. Really don’t do that’. And we stopped completely. The difference I saw within a week was astounding. They walked within 2 weeks, babbled almost immediately and so much curiosity and desire to discover the world. I wish I never let it go so long. The brain is so elastic at that age, especially up until 2 years old and every interaction/ play/ book etc helps with their development. If you can, give it a try. I don’t think you are doing a bad job at all, in fact you sound like a wonderful Mama!

Heyheyitsanotherday · 11/04/2026 08:54

Your dh is an arsehole

BeanQuisine · 11/04/2026 08:54

Baby is fine, husband is a bone idle dumdum.

Thebigarsedbitch · 11/04/2026 09:01

My God! The level of competitive parenting on here is insane! Take absolutely zero notice of it OP - make the most of your relaxed start to the day because in no time at all you'll be back at work and having to get up at the crack of dawn to do everything you need to do before you can leave the house.

As for your DH, I'd ask him to detail a daily parenting schedule for when he is doing 50/50 post divorce as that is what will happen if he doesn't shut the fuck up. And I'd also arrange a solo parenting day for him sooner, rather than later!

hypnovic · 11/04/2026 09:09

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 10/04/2026 23:32

Rest of day is reading, walks, either with just me or other mum friends, sometimes softplay, maybe babygroup (twice per week), sometimes visiting family. I will sit in her playpen with her at other points in day and read to her or play with her toys with her. If she is happy playing in playpen what harm is me having a coffee and catching up with some TV? In same room? As said, if she looks at me and wants interaction I stop watching TV and I speak to her, play with her etc. And she comes straight out if she is being grumpy.

No harm at all
He is a dick and the holier than thous here are too. She is fed safe loved cared for ect you are doing great.

PissedOffAndStuck · 11/04/2026 09:11

The effects of screen time on under 3s is really bad.

Is it really though?

My daughter was a fan of CBeebies from about 9 weeks - she had horrific colic and the only thing that would distract her was The Shiny Show...her first word (aside from mama, dada etc) was actually 'shiny' 😂. She also used to play with the telly on first thing while I had coffee and woke up when she was a bit older as she would wake at 5-5.30am.

She's now 21, about to graduate from a Russel Group uni and then heading to London School of Economics to do her Masters for which she's been awarded a scholarship.

I'm guessing a few puppets and some foil wrapped fruit as a baby hasn't addled her brain too much!

OP, I wonder if your DH's issue is the time of day - it's a bit of an unusual one for a 'break' but if it works around your schedule and DD's needs then it is what it is.

Fidgety31 · 11/04/2026 09:12

I voted YABU as I have never liked putting babies in front of TV. If she is happy to play independently as you say - then the tv doesn’t need to be on .
I think it is lazy parenting yes. So I would agree with your husband here .

sparrowhawkhere · 11/04/2026 09:12

I would try to avoid looking at a phone for as long as you can. It’s a slippery slope because it’s then when you’re out somewhere that she can look at your phone whilst waiting for food, then watching a phone so you can enjoy being out etc. I’m a reception teacher and the amount of children who can’t sit at a table and just eat is shocking. I know it feels a long way off for you but start as you mean to go on.

RachTheAlpaca · 11/04/2026 09:12

Children under 2 should have no screen time AT ALL. So yeah an hour every morning and then more again whilst your cooking is way too much. If you carry on doing it, she will never be interested in playing with her toys because her brain is addicted to screentime. You say she won't sit nicely in the highchair without mrs Rachel, well that's because she's addicted! Your husband is correct here but then he needs to be pulling his weight too so that the 2nd parent is him and not the screen

RosesAndHellebores · 11/04/2026 09:13

@Theonethatlurks presumably you were not engaging adequately with your DC in other ways if they were that far behind. Were you reading to them, teaching them sounds, talking about colours, talking to them as you went along, in simple ways: "look at the buds on the trees, look at the yellow daffodils, mummy is warming your milk, milk comes from animals" blah, blah.

ByPeachPeer · 11/04/2026 09:14

LondonPapa · 10/04/2026 23:40

Honestly? You strike me as lazy. But you do you.

Lazy for having half an hour or an hour in the morning for a coffee. You strike me as judgemental and horrible but you do you.

BudgetBuster · 11/04/2026 09:17

Personally I think 60 mins is too long.... 30 mins is plenty of time to make, have a coffee and sit and scroll or watch TV. I can't say I watched TV whilst my little one was awake, but he wanted constant interaction. An hour is a very long time for a baby.

I contact napped too and that's when I had my down time, a cuppa and tv on low volume.

I definitely wouldn't give a 10 month old a phone though... try to get the suction toys and pop some nursery rhymes on in the background. Give her some fruit or veg to snack on too to keep her semi occupied while you're making dinner.

In the mornings, can your DH not take her for 30 minutes and give her the bottle etc so you can have a few mins to yourself before.the day starts?

I wouldn't say it's lazy per se, but I do think 60 mins is a very long time.

Firesidechatter · 11/04/2026 09:17

I’m not really sure why the need for the play pen repeatedly? If you’re right there and ready to interact with her? And it does appear a lot of screen time for a child.

2gumsonly · 11/04/2026 09:18

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Supperlite · 11/04/2026 09:21

DallazMajor · 10/04/2026 23:26

Tell him to eat shit.

This. One thousand times, this.

Spookyspaghetti · 11/04/2026 09:22

10 months is a bit too young to watch tv alone. Can you try putting high chair in sight of you in the kitchen and giving her a breadstick to suck on while you cook.

EimearF · 11/04/2026 09:23

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:00

Contact naps are lovely not sure what other poster was implying with me saying that. I Just mean that as she wont nap in cot, she wakes instantly if I try popping her down. She was only happy napping in moses basket strangely. Everything else, next to me, big cot, travel cot - nope and I have tried so many times.

People who don’t have babies who contact nap simply do not understand how exhausting it is. You NEED that coffee and tv time. People who plonk their baby in a crib for naps and overnight have zero concept of how much of yourself you have to give to your child when they need contact to sleep. You are not lazy, you are in an almost 24/7 parenting mode. Your husband is being a jerk, I’m sure he gets a coffee and reads the news at his desk in the morning

Pinnacles · 11/04/2026 09:23

The only way to fix this with DH is to go out next Saturday morning first thing and leave him in charge for the day. Remind him she is not allowed any TV and he is not allowed to leave her in the playpen without an adult playing her. Then ask him to report back.

ibeka · 11/04/2026 09:24

I used to do exactly the same (except no playpen, I just shut the living room door and she played whilst I watched the TV and had my coffee). I’ve never been a morning person and needed that time to psych myself up for the day ahead. DD is now 10. She is intelligent, kind, sociable, doing super well at school and excels in sports, dance and music and given the choice spends her free time playing outdoors or writing stories about her teddies, so I seem to have managed not to raise a screen addict or lazy child. Her twin siblings came along when she was 18 months and they are similarly active and engaged in the world.
you continue to enjoy your coffee and do all the lovely things you are doing with your little girl. It passes so quickly!

rockinrobins · 11/04/2026 09:24

Can't believe people are calling you lazy.

It's important that you have time to regulate and charge up for the day as well. Happy mum = happy baby. If you are stressed and overstimulated by constantly being "on", then you can't be a good mum when you do interact and take baby out etc.

Some independent play is also good for their development! Obviously interspersed with plenty of interaction and outings etc but you are doing that too. I always have my morning coffee whilst DS plays on the floor.

2-4 hours of independent floor play time per day is absolutely fine at this age and actually good for them (broken up into smaller chunks of course - 30-60 mins at a time).

I wouldn't do the Miss Rachel in the high chair but that's just personal preference, I'm sure it's not doing any harm. I just don't put DS in the high chair until it's time to eat, but we have an open plan kitchen/ living space which probably makes that easier!

Honestly don't worry OP, you're doing great.

Raindrop75 · 11/04/2026 09:26

Independent play is really beneficial for babies and a little smidge of you time to set you up for the day in my opinion makes for a happier mama and baby overall. I do similar with my little one who is 9mo, he plays best independently in the morning so he has a little time after his bottle and I either have a coffee and catch up on something, or do some bits and bobs for half an hour. Men who don’t stay home often have no idea. My partner had a similar view that it was easy, and then I went back to work on weekends and he now sees it is not 😂 and he uses “independent play time” far more than I do!

Mumstheword1983 · 11/04/2026 09:26

Absolutely fine.

Ms Rachel was the best babysitter I ever did find for doing little jobs around the kitchen and making dinner 😄

TakeALookAtTheseSwatches · 11/04/2026 09:27

I get why you strap her in the highchair whilst you cook dinner but I do think this is what you need to change, it's not really fair for her to be so restricted for what could be an extended period of time. When mine were that age I would have them in the kitchen and give them something to amuse them, preferably something they don't usually play with (Tupperware boxes were a big hit) it was annoying having to keep an eye on them while you're cooking but it's necessary in my opinion.

I also never had a play pen, not saying you're wrong for having one but at this point I'd probably get rid of it and just let her explore without it.

iridescentbloom · 11/04/2026 09:28

I also have a 10 month old, TV is off all day, I only watch TV when she goes to bed at night. When I need to entertain her while I'm cooking I pop her in her highchair and give her some fruit/put the toniebox on, I really don't think there's any need to put kids tv/ms Rachel on when they're so young.

Playpens are also a big no no in our house, I believe babies need the freedom to explore