Food Shortage Plan Being Drawn Up To...
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No best answer has yet been selected by pamaddy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We have cordless phones all over our house, but there's never one nearby when you're in the bath!!!!
It was only last week that I was bathing our 3 & 6 year old Granddaughters & popped into the airing cupboard to fetch another robe. Within seconds I heard coughing & spluttering & rushed back in there to find the 3 year old gasping for breath. She had been showing the 6 year old how she could swim under water!
It's very easy to preach, but you just can't leave children even for a few seconds!
I can't imagine that any phone call is that important that anyone would compromise the safety of a child to answer it.
The bathroom is a dangerous place - the child could stand upo, slip, bang his head, and die in the time it takes to leave the room.
If your husband is so obsessed with answering the phone, then he has a problem. He needs to think seriusly about his approach to parenthood.
If he places answering the phone above his child's safety, there's something seriously wrong with his thought processes. Or to put it bluntly, he's daft as a brush. You MUST make him rethink this. A parent can never take risks like this, even if he thinks it's paranoid to think this way.
Ask him how he'd feel if something happened to the baby - would he regret taking that phone call? Or would he consider it had been an acceptable risk, in the light of the consequences? Imagine facing life knowing that taking a blo0dy phone call had cost your baby's life - hardly bears thinking about.
You have my sympathies. Have a word with him, urgently.
My son is also 18 months old and I would never leave him unattended in the bath even though he is sitting in a safety seat. We have a cordless phone and if I have forgotton to take it into the bathroom with me and the phone rings then I ignore it. No phone call is more important than my son's safety it's as simple as that really. If I was you I would tell your husband that unless he stopped leaving your child alone in a dangerous situation then he shouldn't be allowed to bathe him. Show him these replies and maybe he will realise how foolish he is being.
Don't let him bath your toddler - Ban him from this one activity - to show him how concerned you are - does he really want to attend a funeral - He must see this is so very dangerous and an act of seconds that could haunt him for the rest of his life - He is showing you that his dinner is more important than his child - I don't really think he means to but that is how he is coming accross he must by made aware of this - This is not the actions of a good parent - Strong words I know but this is a powerfull subject