How not to be a jerk at Christmas
A handy guide for supporting new mums at Christmas đ€¶

Whether you have wee ones or not â Christmas can be a stressful time. Or a magical time. Or some kind of magical stressful time. I have had a number of emails in the lead up to Christmas from new mums who are stressed and tired and really nervous about taking their new baby to the big family Christmas.
Christmas can be awesome, and big families can be awesome, and these things can also be really not awesome.
Itâs hard to be assertive and set boundaries and stick to them and feel OK at Christmas time when youâre around heaps of family you donât see often and you have a new baby youâre trying to figure out how to care for AND youâre not getting any sleep.
Itâs awesome if this isnât you â itâs awesome if you have awesome family relations and Christmas Day is a super relaxing day that youâre looking forward to. This is what I think everyone should have.
But everyone doesnât have this. So I wanted to write a post to the people reading this who maybe donât have kids, or have grown up kids, and want to support their friends who are parents through Christmas.
And I also wanted to talk a bit about how we can make Christmas really good for kids.
And not in a â Pinterest gingerbread mansion kind of way, more in a, Christmas can be really overwhelming for little ones so letâs make this easier for them, kind of thingâŠ
(I wrote this in 2015 and itâs been edited and updated. OBVIOUSLY all the images are AI lol)
Advice on how to treat the the might be pregnant mum
DONâT ask if theyâre pregnant
Thatâs it. So theyâre not drinking. So they look bigger. So they have been married a while. Donât ask. Just donât. Do you know what sucks? For a lot of people December 2023 marks a year of trying to have a baby. Imagine beginning a year and making that decision to have a baby â the excitement and joy and the little bit of fear. You might have imagined Christmas as a time when youâd be rubbing your big belly, or youâd be holding your baby. Instead, youâve spent month after month not getting pregnant. Itâs crushing. And debilitating. And now youâve got someone asking you if youâre pregnant when youâre not. Or youâve had a miscarriage and havenât told family. If youâd not lost the baby you might be seven months along. You might have bought a little decoration for the tree.
If someone is pregnant and they want you to know â theyâll tell you.
End. Of. Story.

Advice for how to treat the pregnant at Christmas mum
I was eight months pregnant with my last baby I travelled to Auckland. It was awful. Auckland is hot and horrible even when youâre not eight months pregnant (Iâm sorry Auckland). What made my Christmas tolerable and even enjoyable was the little things my family did to help me throughâŠ
DO â help the mum-to-be to rest
The best thing was when one of the Aunties set up a room for me and put two fans on me and surrounded me with pillows and let me sleep for a few hours in the middle of the day. Do what you can to help the mum-to-be relax. This might be her last chance. If itâs hot â get a fan. Put her feet up. Bring her a nice cold drink.
DO â Look after her other children
If she has other kids, keep an eye on them and keep them entertained. Soon she will have her hands really full, donât make her chase after her kids when you can do it. Sheâll be so grateful, trust me! Also, see below on letting kids be kids. Itâs going to be stressful for her if you keep demanding her other children do things beyond their abilities as little ones.
DONâT bombard her with horror stories
When I was pregnant I never heard one positive birth story. It was all â and then the baby was pulled out by the leg and another friend had a baby and then they were like OMG THERE IS TWO MORE IN THERE and did you hear about the mum whose epidural didnât work and she got pregnant while being pregnant and do you know what a Vaganus is? Itâs when your vagina and anus andâŠ.I rest my caseâŠ.Donât. Sheâll be scared and nervous about labour. Donât make it worse. This rule is for every day â not just Christmas Day.

Advice for how to treat the mum with a new baby
DO â Set her up in a comfy chair
Bring her water. Bring her a plate of food. Let her relax with the baby. When today is over, she will go back to being possibly (quite probably) unsupported. Today is a great day to show her how much you all love her AS WELL AS her baby. Tell her how great sheâs doing. Remind her that sheâs an excellent mum and sheâs doing really well.
DO â Wash your hands before touching the baby and ask first
Babies can get sick easily, but also â as a new mum, the last thing you want to see is someone put their finger in your childâs mouth when you donât know if theyâve washed their hands. Also, donât put your finger in the babyâs mouth unless mum says â âhey, can you put your finger in my babyâs mouthâ. Donât grab the baby. Donât try to wake it when itâs sleeping. If it sleeps all day and mum doesnât want you to move the baby â Too bad. You donât get to hold the baby. Donât ever move the baby unless mum tells you to. Sleep can be hard fought for and babies need their sleep.
If the baby falls asleep on you, Iâm sorry â but you cannot move until the baby wakes up. In my house we have a rule â You wake it, you take it.
DONâT forget about her other children
If she has other children, make sure you welcome them and play with them and make them feel special too. Itâs a big change for a little person â if everyone is cooing over the baby they might feel left out. Talk to them about how theyâre feeling about being a big brother or sister. Let them know how proud you are of how theyâre supporting their mummy and daddy. Show them how much you love them too.
DONâT hog the baby
I know you want to see the baby. I turn into a bit of a weirdo around babies. I just want to sniff them and hold them and theyâre so beautiful and sometimes I feel like some evil queen who wants to eat them. I get the magnetic allure of babies. TRUST ME. I am a baby fiend. Itâs my aim in life to hold every baby. But a mum has waited more than nine months to meet her baby â sometimes itâs been many, many years. Now that baby is here, mum might not want baby handled by heaps of people, and she might want to keep baby close because sheâs still getting to know baby. So often I see family members holding babies while mum races around cleaning and cooking and doing EVERYTHING and I often think it should really be reversed. Mum did all the hard work getting baby here, and she just wants to get to know her baby. If baby is really fresh â do not be surprised or annoyed if she doesnât want you to hold the baby. If you do hold the baby â make sure you donât spend all day with the babyâŠ.Also, âIâll hold the baby while you cleanâ isnât that great of an offer. I hear SO MUCH from new mums about people visiting new babies WAY TOO SOON and just parking themselves on the couch and holding the baby while they make a new mum make them tea and coffee and fix them lunch. Donât be that person. There will be plenty of time to hold the baby.
My next bit of advice?
DO hog the baby
Sometimes youâre like âomg if I hold this baby one more second Iâm going to explode please someone take this babyâ and you just want to catch up with other people and not have a hot, sweaty, sticky baby on you. In that case â hog away. Huff that sweet little baby!
Yes, this is conflicting advice â but thatâs because everyone is different. Follow mumâs lead. If she looks tired and fretful and is clinging tight to baby, she probably wants you to just let her cuddle baby in peace. If she is holding baby at armâs length and saying OMG GET IT. Well, youâre good.
DONâT overwhelm her with stupid questions/dumb advice
âOh sounds like baby is hungry!â Guess what â mum knows when baby is hungry. If baby is crying â mum knows. You donât need to say âmust be hungryâ or âbaby is cryingâ. Donât do âin my dayâ. Donât hassle her for bottle feeding or breast feeding. Donât shit on about how you cherished every minute and tell her while her nipples are bleeding that breastfeeding is bliss. Donât give her shit for having a glass of wine. Not your body, not your choice. Donât tell her the baby needs to sleep â babies always need to sleep. Donât ask if the baby is a âgoodâ baby. All babies are good. Donât scare her with stories of cot death and how you know someone whose baby died. Just chill â talk about how cute the baby is and how great sheâs doing. If she opens up and says sheâs having a hard time â support her. You donât have to provide answers. Just listen.

Advice on how to treat the mum of toddlers and younger kids
DO let the kids have fun
Just chill is my motto for Christmas Day. So the kids are running inside or one of them has opened up a present before they were allowed to. Theyâre kids. Let mum handle it â and if sheâs not bothered, you donât need to be bothered. Donât step in and donât yell at the kids. Think about whether getting angry at children for getting too excited on Christmas day is something you need to do.
If mum decides to let things slide â let them slide. She knows her kids. She has probably decided this isnât a battle worth fighting. If you donât like her way of handling it â wait until sheâs gone and then moan. Nobody needs a scene at Christmas.
Do remember theyâre toddlers and little kids
Tantrums are Normal Toddler And Little Kid Behaviour. Totally normal. Tantrums on Christmas Day â EXPECTED AND ACCEPTABLE. Think about it â whatâs something youâre passionate about? It has to be something you love more than anything in the world. Now imagine you are going to get this thing or experience or whatever. But you have to wait a month. And you donât really know how days work so each day you think this huge thing is happening today but it isnât. Each day you get excited but itâs a normal day and someone says â itâs soon! But you canât really figure out how soon. And the thing youâre freaking obsessed with is sometimes IN THE ROOM UNDER A TREE. But you canât even touch it let alone open it. And then finally â after all this time â you wake up and TODAY IS THE DAY! Youâre about to shit yourself with excitement. And then you get put into a car for four hours. And you donât know how long youâre driving for. For all you know â it could be a year. You finally arrive at your destination â youâre hot and stressed and youâre still waiting for the thing. AND YOU ARE SUPER TIRED â you usually have sleeps during the day but today youâre not allowed to sleep or you feel like if you sleep you might miss the thing. And now there are all these people â and some of them are kissing you and hugging you but youâve never met them. And some of them are lifting you off the ground and youâre a bit scared but also excited because your cousins and friends are there and your grandparents. And thereâs weird tension. But you still want the thing. And you donât know when youâre going to get the thing.
And did I mention you have very little control of your emotions?
Now â youâve got to go through all of that and youâre never once allowed to get upset or cry or complain or have any kind of reaction. Because if you do â youâre bad. And everyone will tell you youâre bad. And theyâll compare you to your friend or cousin or sister who has handled it slightly better than you. And in front of you theyâll say your friend or cousin or brother is a better person than you.
This is what Christmas can be like for kids. Itâs super fun â but itâs exhausting. Naps donât happen when they need to. Thereâs new people, new situations, lots of travel. Worst still â people talk about you like youâre not even there and say youâre good or bad as if you canât hear them.
Be gentle on the little ones and donât expect too much from them. Let them be kids.
Remember â if you can handle the aunty who always gets drunk or the uncle who is really gross â you can handle the spirited toddler. Adults get SO MUCH space to be dicks at Christmas. Let kids be kids because theyâre not trying to hurt anyone and theyâre not being dicks. Theyâre just being kids. They have way less ability to handle their emotions than X FAMILY MEMBER WHO EVERYONE HAS WHO IS JUST OUT OF CONTROL.
Donât judge a mum for one day of the year
You donât see what goes on every day at home. You donât see the way she handles all the kids and gets to work on time and keeps the house running and does charity work and has endless smiles for her children even when sheâs exhausted. You donât see that so donât think you know her by a few tired remarks on Christmas Day.
If she loses it â it will be because sheâs tired and stressed and Christmas can be overwhelming. If she cries â itâs probably because sheâs overwhelmed. If she snaps at the kids â sheâll probably feel awful about it, and your raised eyebrow wonât help.
Be kind. The best present you can give is letting her know that this is just one day â if the kids are running wild thatâs fine, if she canât keep up thatâs ok, if sheâs exhausted let her rest â tomorrow is another day. And weâre family and family do what we can to look out for each other. And thereâs always next year.
Meri Kerihimete! X
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