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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To "use up" a home start volunteer for myself...

439 replies

Bathsheba · 06/02/2010 18:04

3 months ago I was really ill - I had bi-lateral (used to be called double) pneumonia, and swine flu, all whilst being 7 months pregnant. I was very ill but they wouldn't admit me to hopsital or give me anything other than standard gp care etc...

While I was ill I contacted my midwife and HV because I was in a position where my DH needed to go back to work (and go abroad for a number of days) but I couldn't look after my children - I was too ill. They looked into various options for me including Social Services Childminding but in the end my Dh was able to take 2 weeks dependants leave. However, at this point my Hv referred me to Home Start so that I would have some support if anything like that ever happened again.

I have since had my baby and I'm almost fully recovered from my c-section but my Dh is off back to work on Monday. I have 3 dds - 1 is ages 6 and at school full time, DD2 is 3 and goes to playgroup for 3 sessions a week and DD3 is 3 weeks old and is yummy.

The Home Start Co-ordinator phoned and said they now have a volunteer for me who can come and see me for a few hours a week and either give me a hand round the house, or look after the baby etc while I go and have a shower for example.

I feel really torn...I guess I'm a fairly typical middle class SAHM - my DH comes home every night (often at 6:30 - 7 but he is here every day apart from the odd business trip abroad) and my Mum is local. I also have a cleaner for a few hours once a week, which means the place isn't permanantly like a show home but it means that the bathrooms etc are regularly cleaned. I drive and have access to a car every day so we get out and about and I can take the girls to their activities. They have extra things like tennis lessons and ballet which, yes its sometimes a bit of a hassle to take them to, but at the end of the day these are optional things we have chosen for them to do and really I can't complain about them...

However the idea of someone coming round so I can have a LONG shower during the day, and maybe get a chance to tidy the bigger girls's room sounds fantastic - when my Mum is round I don't really do those types of things because she is here with me and we do things together....although I'm sure she'd watch the girls if I ask.

I had PND after DD1 was born, and PTSD after DD2 was born, so I can see why my HV is keen to surround me with support, but I feel a fraud taking a much needed volunteer away from possibly a single Mum or someone with little local family support, or a Mum without the opportunities I have.

The Home Start Co-ordinator is coming round to see me on Monday afternoon to discuss things and I'm really wondering if I should embrace the opportunity and say thank you, or if I should really explain that I feel a bit of a fraud and I understand her volunteers are like gold dust and someone more deserving really should have this volunteers time rather than me...

OP posts:
BethNoireNewNameForPeachy · 07/02/2010 20:00

Agent me too LOL- guess there are a lot of us about (organsiers who lost job through funding)

and absolutely, I would be tlaking about a judgemental attitude. I'dalso be quite sad I had't picked it up in training as we normally do and wouldn't necessarily pas someone if we found them judgemental (or limit their work as we have done)

Fleegle · 07/02/2010 20:07

I think it's clear that different areas will have different access criteria according to availablilty of funding and voulunteers.

I don't think that thesecondcoming is being judgmental, just works in an area which has different criteria, and is pointing out her experience in her area.

LeQueen · 07/02/2010 20:08

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rainbowinthesky · 07/02/2010 20:09

WHat I dont get is why the op just cant have her long shower in the evening, when her mother is there or when her dc are asleep. Surely that's how the rest of the world do it.

thesecondcoming · 07/02/2010 20:09

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fishingboat · 07/02/2010 20:12

At the end of the day do whats right for you and your family, listen to what support homestart can offer you, and if you think you can benefit from it take the help that is offered you, this country is so lucky to have organisations like homestart if families start refusing their help where does that leave them!! Do whats right for you

And moondog your views stink!!!

DandyLioness · 07/02/2010 20:12

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LeQueen · 07/02/2010 20:12

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LeQueen · 07/02/2010 20:12

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BooHooo · 07/02/2010 20:14

What has that got to do with it?

TotalChaos · 07/02/2010 20:16

I suspect the shower business is a red herring, that the HV was trying to "sell" Homestart to the OP in a light hearted way.

Surely it's better for HS to work preventively, if sufficient volunteers are available, than to only be involved where things have become desperate.

LeQueen · 07/02/2010 20:18

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DandyLioness · 07/02/2010 20:20

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thesecondcoming · 07/02/2010 20:20

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Northernlurker · 07/02/2010 20:23

Dandylioness - that's bollocks quite frankly! The op didn't say that at all. She said that having a long shower would be nice. She hasn't gone to her HV and demanded this as an essential but it is a way for her to make time for her. The op hasn't asked for anything recently at all but her HV considered she needed a bit of extra support and has put her forward for it.

TSC - the sacrifices you make to volunteer are your business and nobody elses. I would rather you didn't bother frankly than apply yourself to it with the attitude you seem to have.

What on earth is wrong with you all - do you really think the world operates only on your self righteous scale of help deserved? Op has a cleaner - so she should pull her up socks and get on with things? Mental health is no respecter of salary earned.

DandyLioness · 07/02/2010 20:23

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TheElephant · 07/02/2010 20:24

its all a figment
the whole thing
barn coversion or not

tethersend · 07/02/2010 20:25

"But what put people's backs up - including mine - is that the OP said she'd like the volunteer so she can take a long shower. Not simply a shower - she admits she has a shower every morning. But a long, pampering shower."

The Bitch. Who the fuck does she think she is? Long pampering shower indeed...

TheElephant · 07/02/2010 20:26

get a bouncy chair
and is speak as a simpering blubber

DandyLioness · 07/02/2010 20:27

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TheElephant · 07/02/2010 20:28

aha
the OP has odour issues and the only way the HV can sort it is by a long winded homestart thang

tethersend · 07/02/2010 20:29

I mean, she'll be wanting to do her bikini line next...

...disgusting

TheElephant · 07/02/2010 20:29

maybe that smells?

tethersend · 07/02/2010 20:31

What?

Northernlurker · 07/02/2010 20:32

No DL - you said 'I think it is reasonable to question whether - based on the OP's circumstances and ability to cope in the present day - she has a genuine need as her case centres on a shower and having time to tidy' - that is not her case at all and you remark is therfore patently bollocks.