Topic —  Parenting Solutions, Ages & Stages — Babies,

The Delegation Game

Ann Douglas
September 26, 2011
Ann Douglas
How do you delegate tasks to friends and family members when adjusting to a new baby in the house?
Twitter See All Email

Your new baby has arrived. You’re thrilled, but exhausted. Friends and family members are offering to pitch in, but you’re too tired to figure out how to take advantage of their offers of extra assistance. What should you do?

Explain your situation to a friend who has been there. A mom with slightly older kids will know exactly what types of help you could need right now and will have mastered the organizational tricks necessary to allow you to tap into all that volunteer energy.

Provide this friend with the names and contact information for anyone who has offered to help—and give her a rough idea of each person’s skills and interests. If your friend (aka volunteer coordinator) knows that your cousin loves to cook and has offered to drop off dinner for your family one evening, she can take your cousin upon on this offer and let you know when this delicious homemade dinner will be arriving on your doorstep (so you can sit back and relax that evening).

And if your friends and family members haven’t been quite as forthcoming with offers to help as you might have hoped, your friend can make contact with a few key people, at your request, asking if they might be willing to help out with particular tasks.

When other people drop by to help with laundry or other light housekeeping tasks, let them help. Don’t feel like you should be pitching in. They are there to ease the workload for you during the early weeks of parenthood. Caring a baby is plenty of work. So accept the gift graciously by planting yourself on the couch and saying, “Thank you.”

Ask for help in identifying the key mom and baby resources in your town: where and when the local moms’ group meets; what number you should call if you have any breastfeeding questions; and what online and real-world communities have sprung up in your area. Even if you did your own research back when you were still pregnant, you’ll likely find that your friends will turn up a few additional resources that you weren’t able to uncover on your own—and that will make life better for you and your baby. That’s the magic of the mom-to-mom grapevine!

Ann Douglas is the author of numerous books about pregnancy and parenting, including The Mother of All Toddler Books and The Mother of All Parenting Books. You can find her at www.anndouglas.ca and www.having-a-baby.com or follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/themotherofall.
Comments (1) | Tagged under baby, parenting, sleep
Twitter See All Email

Comments

  1. Posted by robyn on October 02, 2011 at 07:39 PM

    Great article!

Post a Comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this blog until the author has approved them.
notify me of follow-up comments?

Our Commenting Policy

Manners are important to moms. So it won’t surprise you that at SavvyMom Media we try our best to keep the discussion respectful. While we hope you will share your thoughts in the comments, we ask that you keep it clean. Please avoid all profanity, derogatory terms, advertising/spam, and unsubstantiated personal attacks. If you see a comment that you feel is abusive, please .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).

We promise not to delete your comments unless they violate these terms, though we sincerely hope we won’t have to make that decision. For more detail on our commenting policy and procedures, please see our complete Community Guidelines

Search Experts' Articles

Explore More Savvy

Explore More
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy
Web CMS | Website Design
EatSavvy ShopSavvy ShareSavvy PartySavvy GoSavvy SavvyStories SickKids
close
Are you savvy yet? sign up  now to receive our newsletter twice weekly