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I get it Sophie - Theres a sticky in the Home Life, Relationships & Finance section!sophie said:What is working tax credits![]()
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I get it Sophie - Theres a sticky in the Home Life, Relationships & Finance section!sophie said:What is working tax credits![]()
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Wobbles said:I get it Sophie - Theres a sticky in the Home Life, Relationships & Finance section!sophie said:What is working tax credits![]()
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Kina said:1. Make you're own food. A carrot costs about 8p.
2. Use reusable wipes, spending nearly £7 a week on wetwipes is so much money!
3. Reusable nappies save shedloads of cash in the long run, particularly if you plan on having more children.
4. Sorry, some people might not like this, but only 2% of women can't breastfeed for genuine health reasons. Breastfeeding is free and the healthiest thing you can do for your baby. If you don't want to breastfeed and you're in a situation where you're not going to be able to afford to adequately feed your child with formula, should you really be having kids?
Apologies in advance if I've offended anyone, I just get fed up of hearing people whinge on about how they can't afford this and that, the government should be giving them more cash, when really they could be helping themselves and their families by pulling their finger out their asses and doing something about their situation instead of expecting other people to for them.
Alfiesmummy said:Kina said:1. Make you're own food. A carrot costs about 8p.
2. Use reusable wipes, spending nearly £7 a week on wetwipes is so much money!
3. Reusable nappies save shedloads of cash in the long run, particularly if you plan on having more children.
4. Sorry, some people might not like this, but only 2% of women can't breastfeed for genuine health reasons. Breastfeeding is free and the healthiest thing you can do for your baby. If you don't want to breastfeed and you're in a situation where you're not going to be able to afford to adequately feed your child with formula, should you really be having kids?
Apologies in advance if I've offended anyone, I just get fed up of hearing people whinge on about how they can't afford this and that, the government should be giving them more cash, when really they could be helping themselves and their families by pulling their finger out their asses and doing something about their situation instead of expecting other people to for them.
Kina if this is aimed at me id just like to say no offense taken but I cannot go out to work my OH works away full time and often isnt back for the weekend, fair enough breast milk is free good stuff etc, all well and good if id produced any, yes I will agree with making own food and as of today this morning i started making my own food for Alfie, I wont use terry nappoies personal choice the same as i wont use re-useable wipes. My choice yes and not once have i said i cant afford my rant as id explained earlier is that the government pays us that and i hardly see my OH etc and he works hard and we get by we do fine, yet a friend of mine whose worked for 3 months in her entire life gets more than us has no job has no intention of getting one and is basically sitting pretty, yes benefits should go to peopkle who need the help and im not for a second saying i am one of those but at the end of the day why is MY family doing without because OH is paying xxx amount of pounds in taxes so that the likes of my friend can take the piss!
Alfiesmummy said:Kina said:1. Make you're own food. A carrot costs about 8p.
2. Use reusable wipes, spending nearly £7 a week on wetwipes is so much money!
3. Reusable nappies save shedloads of cash in the long run, particularly if you plan on having more children.
4. Sorry, some people might not like this, but only 2% of women can't breastfeed for genuine health reasons. Breastfeeding is free and the healthiest thing you can do for your baby. If you don't want to breastfeed and you're in a situation where you're not going to be able to afford to adequately feed your child with formula, should you really be having kids?
Apologies in advance if I've offended anyone, I just get fed up of hearing people whinge on about how they can't afford this and that, the government should be giving them more cash, when really they could be helping themselves and their families by pulling their finger out their asses and doing something about their situation instead of expecting other people to for them.
Kina if this is aimed at me id just like to say no offense taken but I cannot go out to work my OH works away full time and often isnt back for the weekend, fair enough breast milk is free good stuff etc, all well and good if id produced any, yes I will agree with making own food and as of today this morning i started making my own food for Alfie, I wont use terry nappoies personal choice the same as i wont use re-useable wipes. My choice yes and not once have i said i cant afford my rant as id explained earlier is that the government pays us that and i hardly see my OH etc and he works hard and we get by we do fine, yet a friend of mine whose worked for 3 months in her entire life gets more than us has no job has no intention of getting one and is basically sitting pretty, yes benefits should go to peopkle who need the help and im not for a second saying i am one of those but at the end of the day why is MY family doing without because OH is paying xxx amount of pounds in taxes so that the likes of my friend can take the piss!
Minxy said:Alfiesmummy said:I wont use terry nappoies personal choice the same as i wont use re-useable wipes.
Just noticed this. I completely agree that everyone has individual idea when it comes to child raising but then we can't complain when the government handouts don't match our 'personal choice'. My personal choice would be to dress Stanley in 'Daisy and Tom' clothes but £17 a week doesn't stretch that far either!![]()
Congrats on the home-made food BTW. How's it going? Stanley loves carrots but that's about it. Still, at least they're cheap![]()
Minxy said:Dionne, I'm going to try growing my own this year. If I get over crops you can have them for free!!!![]()
Kina said:Weestar I don't think you're a bad mother, but like Dionne, I don't fully understand that if you had benefits coming in why you couldn't stretch to a tin of formula a week for your baby. I'm sure your children are loved, like all of us on here love our children. As you'd discussed with your HV that you were taking her off of formula I would have hoped as a responsible HV they would have looked into helping you get what your baby nutritionally needed, rather than advising what they did. But as we all know not all HVs are responsible with the advice that they dish out!!
Kina said:It wasn't aimed at anyone in particular and it wasn't a personal attack. My point was that disposable nappies, formula, disposable wipes and jarred baby food are all expensive options and there are ways of cutting down on costs. You don't have to use terry nappies, cloth nappies have come on in leaps and bounds since those days. There is no soaking and no hassle (well in my opinion). If I had both my babies (when the new one is here) in disposables and used disposable wipes I'd be spending about £100 a month, for £300 I can have them both completely kitted out with nappies and wipes. That £100 I'm saving then goes towards clothes and food etc.quote]
thats fine hun i just thought it was as it listed all the points i covered i wasnt having a bitch just stating why i said what i had said.
[/quote]Minxy said:Congrats on the home-made food BTW. How's it going? Stanley loves carrots but that's about it. Still, at least they're cheap![]()