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heyJUDE... Y Young families need a lot of help, and in these days when both parents often work, childcare can be a huge burden. How H can the generations work together to ensure everyone’s needs are met?

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Do you have on? e to weigh in you’d like Jud ions to nzww@ est Send your qu z with ‘Hey Jude’ .n o bauermedia.c line, or to Hey t c in the subje , , Bauer Media Jude, NZW W 2, Wellesley 251 Private Bag 9 ckland Street, Au 1141.

School’s in! Jude Dobson ADVICE

IDEAS ABOVE YOUR STATIONERY

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was out buying some folders recently and saw all the back-to-school displays – the exercise books, the pencil cases, the book-covering adhesive... Oh, the book-covering carry-on – I am so pleased I’m past that. I got pretty good in the end though. It’s one thing to wrangle the sticky stuff onto the book; it’s quite another to have no bubbles. These days there are a million and one suggestions online on how to do it well. I’ve just had a look, and yes, I think I developed the best technique in the end. Hot tip – cover the back first, so you get your best (more practised) work on the front. At last resort, pop

any bubbles with a needle and smooth with a ruler. I remember a couple of years there when the arty firstborn added an extra element of complexity as she wanted to create collages and images first, which then had to go on a plain background, with the clear seal over top. The pressure was on at that point for me, I have to say! Now, the only schoolaged offspring in our house is our Year 12, who self-sorts anything she needs. While I don’t miss the book covering days, it was lovely to see the kids in the shops with their parents, sorting out their needs. If that’s on your to-do list, good luck!

Learning curve

READER LETTER OF THE WEEK Dear Jude, The new school year is starting soon, and I will be looking after my grandchildren again in the afternoons, when they finish school for the day. I am happy to do it because I love them so much, but I feel my daughter and her husband take me a little for granted. They’re happy for me to come over and look after the kids, but only when it suits them. I don’t want to risk our relationship, but I would like to find a way to remind them I am a grandmother and not

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just an old lady who babysits for free! Any advice please? Laura That’s not a great feeling for you. Nobody likes to feel taken for granted. But if you pipe up, what is it that you say? That’s the tricky bit. Maybe think about the result you want. Do you want gratitude? Or is it that you want to see the grandchildren a little more on your terms, like a fun weekend thing every so often, rather than being the unpaid weekday childcare? You say you’re happy to do

New Zealand Woman’s Weekly

it, but every day after school is quite some commitment, and tiring too, I’d pick. It’s also the everyday stuff on repeat, week in, week out. What if you dropped down to perhaps three days a week instead of five? Is that an outcome you’d like? Most families would expect to pay for household help at least for some of the week, surely? If this notion appeals, I would say to your daughter that after the break over summer you’ve realised how tiring it is doing this every day. Point out that,

given your age, you think it’s wise to pull back a little, but say you don’t want to leave them in the lurch so perhaps they could look for someone who might be able to cover a day or two of the week? Then maybe you might instead pick up a weekend sports game, which gives a bit more flexibility for add-on fun – an ice-cream on the way home, a stop at a favourite park, etc. I’d at least float the prospect of having a bit of a relook at the presumed hours before school kicks in again and see where the discussion goes.


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