This is irritating me a little, so I'm going to vent, but a Facebook "friend" deleted the comment I made on the photo she posted of her little girl coloring. I said soemthing like "Soo cute! As a non parent I've always liked that age. They're so cute walking and running around, exploring the world. As a new parent the meltdowns might change my mind, lol". Does ANYONE see how that can be offensive? Because I cannot. Is she being uptight about the joke about meltdowns? If so, she's got a real big stick up her ass. To me being humorous about the things children do is a good coping mechanism. Does it sound pervy somehow? Clearly I'm missing something. At the end of the day I'm merely stating the obvious: that her little girl is cute. Up until the age of two all kids are adorable to me. Then they turn two and the defiance starts and it gets interesting.
Anyway, I just wanted to vent about that. I know it's only Facebook and not a big deal, but if I'm not being allowed to post comments on someone's other posts, especially when I don't even know that someone (we're both in the same due date club online and THAT'S why we've friended each other), then why should I even stay FB friends with her? Without some kind of explanation, she's being rude.
Speaking of this due date club, it's been a helpful tool for any questions that I have as first timer. There are maybe 4 other first timers that I'm aware of and the rest already have kids. It's been great for the most part, but when a bunch of us decided to friend each other on FB I was a bit reluctant to do it. I don't care about sharing my info with them because I don't include a lot of it, but I feel a bit rough around the edges compared to them. I swear a lot and I wonder if I'm offending them. I know a lot of parents out there are chill, but I get the vibe that a few of these moms are more uptight, like their own FB pages have to be child appropriate when their children have NOTHING to do with their personal profiles. Their children appear in pictures and may have mentions here and there in their posts, but that's it. I just want to be myself on FB, while these women seem to put on this "mommy face" all the time. That is something about parents that I HATE. Save the mommy face for the kids, but don't expect me to talk to you like I'm talking to royalty just because your a mom and have to wear your mommy face all the time. Be an adult around adults, yeesh! Maybe their just a snobby bunch.
In other news I believe Nate and I have decided on using a cloth diapering service. I want to use cloth diapers because the idea of throwing away all that plastic makes me want to shudder. But then, the idea of scraping poop and washing my own baby's diapers made me shudder too. So...we're getting someone else to provide the diapers for us, come pick up the poopy ones, drop off clean ones AND wash the ones we've used. It's cost effective in so many ways. Besides the cost of diapers themselves, our laundry machines are coin operated and shared. So the amount of money we would spend on doing laundry is stupid. Plus some poor neighbor is going to come along after a diaper load and wash their laundry and I just feel so bad that, hey, I just washed a bunch of shitty diapers! Happy laundering! This diaper service has a laundering service that uses less detergent and less water and less energy than if I were to wash my own. It would cost us $25 a week for unlimited diapers, assuming we rent the covers as well. So...$100 a month. We could spend close to double that in disposables and contribute to a landfill in the process. NOT COOL. We could buy the covers, but with renting it's about a buck more and they will give us bigger sizes as baby grows rather than us having to buy new covers every time baby grows out of them. The only things we'd have to buy are the pail to put the used diapers in, the filter for odor and the travel bag. Anyway, since I plan on breast feeding, $100 a month seems pretty darn good. The only other expenses I can think of are the ones that come along as baby grows like new clothing, new pacifiers, new bottles, etc. Sure that stuff can add up, but cutting down the cost of diapers will help immensely.