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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:
ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:22

ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:21

The baby monitor is a good idea!

Yes, will definitely do that.

OP posts:
Franjipanl8r · 11/04/2026 00:24

Having a coffee whilst they’re in a playpen is fine, but I wouldn’t give a 10 month old a screen in their high chair. It’s very easy to become reliant on screens as a parent and they aren’t necessarily - they make parenting harder IMO.

RawBloomers · 11/04/2026 00:24

ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:00

I feel a walker would be better than a play-pen at 10 months old. She probably does feel restricted in the play-pen and even more so in the high-chair for no reason whatsoever other than for you to cook dinner (usually kids go in it to eat!).

Time to open up your house for more movement.

Walkers are bad for development. Free play in a large playpen is way better.

TheSocialHermit · 11/04/2026 00:25

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 10/04/2026 23:51

Yes, we go to 2 baby groups per week and usually go a walk after. Saturdays we do swimming. Then once a week I visit family or meet other mum friends where we go to a softplay. I go to book bug with her too and local playgroup in village. In the house I read everyday to her, I sing to her all the time, constantly playing with her, tickling her, talking to her. She is only in playpen for my morning coffee.

You’re doing enough. Ignore your husband and the sanctimonious “Stepford Wives” on here who insist you’re undeserving of a peaceful drink first thing in the morning.

BerryTwister · 11/04/2026 00:25

marcyhermit · 11/04/2026 00:06

Are you getting a bit confused between an hour and forever 🤔

@marcyhermit OP has stated that her baby is in the playpen most of the time when they’re not out.

Thatphoneneverworked · 11/04/2026 00:26

Tell him to go fuck himself

TestTickle · 11/04/2026 00:26

I think it's whatever works for your mental health provided it's balanced

If your DH minds so much then maybe he can entertain baby while you cook /watch your morning Tv

Crazymum128 · 11/04/2026 00:27

I don't think you are lazy. But you are being criticised by someone who doesn't walk in your shoes.. as mum of three now grown ups I did whatever worked. I sat and watched them (or tv ) while they played.. we had breakfast and got dressed and went out . My mums generation would strap us in a pram outside !! . Nobody can tell you that your doing it wrong.they don't come with rule books, just tired usually stressed mums . And if hubby says anything unhelpful...just pop on your coat and say I'll just leave this to you
And go for a walk .And don't apologise or make excuses for anything you do..its your child unless you are hitting the vodka and completely ignoring them . Do things your way . And good luck. Xx

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:27

BerryTwister · 11/04/2026 00:25

@marcyhermit OP has stated that her baby is in the playpen most of the time when they’re not out.

Only because it takes up so much space in livingroom. I do let her roam the little space left in livingroom, hall etc. I dont always put her in playpen and close the door/gate. Door is open and she will sometimes crawl out and I watch/follow her. I will sometimes sit in playpen as its so bloody big.

OP posts:
ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:28

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:22

Yes, will definitely do that.

You could have some nursery rhymes playing gently in the background, just so she doesn’t feel alone, it’ll also help with learning to - eventually - form words etc…

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:29

ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:28

You could have some nursery rhymes playing gently in the background, just so she doesn’t feel alone, it’ll also help with learning to - eventually - form words etc…

I might give this a go tomorrow and see. Will feel better with monitor there.

OP posts:
ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:30

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:29

I might give this a go tomorrow and see. Will feel better with monitor there.

Good luck 🤞

BionicEar · 11/04/2026 00:31

Ignore your DH and the mumnetters wringing their hands. I think it’s fine. Great to teach baby independent skills to play on own and not to be reliant on others to entertain.

Also gives you breathing space to prepare for the day ahead.

Regard the kitchen - is it big enough to put playpen/travel cot in corner with toys in? That’s what I used to do when having to make meals. All my babies were happy to play in travel cot whilst I got on with making meals.

i would chat to them whilst cooking or put story tape/music on for them to listen to.

Do what works for you. If DH dislikes it so much, tell him that on the mornings he has your baby he can provide all singing dancing show minus the brew!

BerryTwister · 11/04/2026 00:31

Why do you strap her in a high chair when you’re cooking? Then give her a screen to keep her quiet? Surely that’s the time for the play pen, while you’re cooking.

Also, if you’re so sure that what you’re doing is right, why did you start this thread?

IsItTheBlackOneOrTheRedOne · 11/04/2026 00:32

PermanentTemporary · 10/04/2026 23:31

I’d ask him compassionately if he is having a shit time at work, has he got something on his mind?

The only thing I would say is that I loathe TV in the morning, both for children and myself. If he felt like me about it then he might want to talk about a different routine. But ultimately the parent dealing with the child gets to make the calls.

Same here, morning TV gives me an irrational rage! However OP, you are entitled to rest time, however that looks for you x

ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:33

JayJayj · 11/04/2026 00:15

Walkers are not good for babies at all.

Oh! I’m showing my age! Mine are 17 and 14, they seemed to be the ‘must-have’ back when they were babies.

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:33

BerryTwister · 11/04/2026 00:31

Why do you strap her in a high chair when you’re cooking? Then give her a screen to keep her quiet? Surely that’s the time for the play pen, while you’re cooking.

Also, if you’re so sure that what you’re doing is right, why did you start this thread?

Im happy for opinions but getting frustrated with people assuming she is restricted and cant move in pen and has unlimited screen time. I put her in highchair for all reasons already given. I will put monitor in livingroom and leave in her pen whilst cooking tomorrow.

OP posts:
ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:34

ModestlyPrudent · 11/04/2026 00:33

Oh! I’m showing my age! Mine are 17 and 14, they seemed to be the ‘must-have’ back when they were babies.

I keep getting told walkers are bad and have read so many articles about this to hence why I never got one

OP posts:
Sj07 · 11/04/2026 00:35

Don't give yourself a hard time. And don't allow others to either. There will come a day, very very soon, that you will not get one sip of hot coffee for about the next 10 years. Enjoy your coffee now, with what sounds like a very content, easy going baby (except when in a highchair). You do what you need to do, to be the best mum you can be. Half an hour on the sofa with your morning coffee before kicking off the day is absolutely fine. Strapping baby in a highchair, where they are safe, and under your watch, while you cook for them is also, absolutely fine. And guess what? Being lazy sometimes, is also absolutely fine. There are going to be times you're run off your feet chasing a toddler around whatever activity you've organised. There are going to be days where you build the best blanket fort ever just for 5 minutes peace. Don't listen to these neurotic nutters that never let their children have screen time, never let them go a minute being unstimulated and bored. The ones who have never so much as sat down when baby is awake. Do you know what my kids absolute favourite game was when they were toddlers? They're one year apart btw, so I was exhausted.. The game was sleeping monsters. They'd break into my room in the morning when they woke up. I'd "pretend" to be a snoring, sleeping monster. They'd creep around the room, and dare to get close to the sleeping monster (who btw was 100% disco-napping) and if they got close enough, I'd catch them and tickle them (half asleep) and they would howl with laughter. Thought it was the best thing ever. They know now, that they're 15 and 16 that mum just wanted a bit more sleep. But they remember it fondly. Also, their absolute favourite "activity" out of the thousands of pounds spent on days out over the years, was to have a bath with mum because "your big butt makes the water go high" .. You can spend your last penny trying to entertain kids, you can exhaust yourself being a full on mum going 100mph every day, you can get up at 5am and bake sourdough from scratch and only eat organic and have baby permanently attached to you, and never watch TV, and only play with educational toys. Be as neurotic as you like. But all kids want is to have fun with their favourite person. The little years don't last for long, enjoy these little moments while they last. And enjoy the hot morning coffee while you can. Don't make it harder than it needs to be. Enjoy your time with your baby.

Calliopespa · 11/04/2026 00:35

I think the independent play is actually a bonus. Parenting has become such a competitive art that far too many children are never left to play/investigate/imagine for themselves but are dragged form Monkey Music to baby swimming to football practice (in later years) to ballet to tennis coaching to Scouts to self-defence to gym to anything that can be called an "Improving Activity" except the one improvement young brains are intended by Nature to be making, which is learning to explore and occupy themselves.

The bit that I think is less good is having the TV on. There is a lot of evidence that having radio or tv in the background impacts developing concentration and language skills because their brains wire up to tune out the constant background noise.

Could you just chill on the sofa and have a cup of tea while DC plays?

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:36

We were going to do more research on walker and buy the playpen in meantime. But when it arrived, I was shocked when DH built it all (you can pick how many pieces you build). But I couldn't believe how happy she was crawling around pkaying with toys, pulling herself up. Pulling herself up and walking around the edge is her favourite thing. With it being so big, she is definitely getting her steps in!! Lol

OP posts:
ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:37

Sj07 · 11/04/2026 00:35

Don't give yourself a hard time. And don't allow others to either. There will come a day, very very soon, that you will not get one sip of hot coffee for about the next 10 years. Enjoy your coffee now, with what sounds like a very content, easy going baby (except when in a highchair). You do what you need to do, to be the best mum you can be. Half an hour on the sofa with your morning coffee before kicking off the day is absolutely fine. Strapping baby in a highchair, where they are safe, and under your watch, while you cook for them is also, absolutely fine. And guess what? Being lazy sometimes, is also absolutely fine. There are going to be times you're run off your feet chasing a toddler around whatever activity you've organised. There are going to be days where you build the best blanket fort ever just for 5 minutes peace. Don't listen to these neurotic nutters that never let their children have screen time, never let them go a minute being unstimulated and bored. The ones who have never so much as sat down when baby is awake. Do you know what my kids absolute favourite game was when they were toddlers? They're one year apart btw, so I was exhausted.. The game was sleeping monsters. They'd break into my room in the morning when they woke up. I'd "pretend" to be a snoring, sleeping monster. They'd creep around the room, and dare to get close to the sleeping monster (who btw was 100% disco-napping) and if they got close enough, I'd catch them and tickle them (half asleep) and they would howl with laughter. Thought it was the best thing ever. They know now, that they're 15 and 16 that mum just wanted a bit more sleep. But they remember it fondly. Also, their absolute favourite "activity" out of the thousands of pounds spent on days out over the years, was to have a bath with mum because "your big butt makes the water go high" .. You can spend your last penny trying to entertain kids, you can exhaust yourself being a full on mum going 100mph every day, you can get up at 5am and bake sourdough from scratch and only eat organic and have baby permanently attached to you, and never watch TV, and only play with educational toys. Be as neurotic as you like. But all kids want is to have fun with their favourite person. The little years don't last for long, enjoy these little moments while they last. And enjoy the hot morning coffee while you can. Don't make it harder than it needs to be. Enjoy your time with your baby.

Thank you x

OP posts:
MyLuckyHelper · 11/04/2026 00:39

BerryTwister · 11/04/2026 00:31

Why do you strap her in a high chair when you’re cooking? Then give her a screen to keep her quiet? Surely that’s the time for the play pen, while you’re cooking.

Also, if you’re so sure that what you’re doing is right, why did you start this thread?

If she started a thread saying “I leave my DD to play in another room while I cook…Is this OK” she’d have had as many comments, if not more telling her what an awful parent she was.

There will always be someone to come along and tell you that they sacrifice every minute of their existence to give their children the best possible experience, never stopping to have a drink or use the loo. But the reality is, most parent don’t, or can’t, live like that and their children will be just fine.

ILoveFatFaceSocks · 11/04/2026 00:41

Sometimes when I go to family or friends (who dont have kids) and they are like "what shall we put on tv for her??" I say nothing. She is happy with the toys I have brought or is happy exploring or for us to talk away to her. I am not jumping at every chance to to put ms rachel on. Its literally when I cook and she isnt being ignored when I do that. I am still talking or singing.

OP posts:
WerewolfOfLoudon · 11/04/2026 00:42

BerryTwister · 10/04/2026 23:59

@RaspberryRipple3 no, I’m saying that those of us who’ve employed nannies or use nurseries, generally want our kids looked after well. If the people looking after our kids were watching TV we wouldn’t be happy. Which suggests that watching TV isn’t not considered good parenting. I was asking OP to reflect on whether she would be happy for other people caring for her child to watch TV.

Nannies get to go home after they have finished their job. @ILoveFatFaceSocks is on duty 24/7. She is allowed to have a life too.

The 34% who agree with your DH are the men and the judgemental perfect mums @ILoveFatFaceSocks. Sounds like you are doing great to me, safest place for baby in a kitchen is strapped in a high chair. You keep her entertained instead of causing a hazard while you are cooking. Children have had screen time for decades.

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