Leanna said:
Err, so with a pregnant character, does this mean you're going to have an eighth?
Nah, I'm already counting Peanut as number 7.
As for the rest, ... well, hubbie and I put together a blended family 2 1/2 years ago. We had one child 16 months ago, and Peanut is due on Davy's 2nd birthday. Between us, we have 17g, 16b, 14g, 10g, 9b, 1b, and 0? They don't all live with us full time, but most of them do. The 17 year old is finishing her education at Job Corps (local campus, so still comes home weekends and for family events), and the 9 year old boy lives 3 hours away during the school year, and lives with us during the summer.
Keeping things moving is currently a challenge. Davy doesn't sleep enough, so neither do Mom and Dad; and being pregnant, I'm tired most of the time. I'll be very glad when school starts up again and I can slow down! As for money, yeah it is a challenge. We are pretty low income, but we manage because my staying home gives the the time to really organize things to save money. We are "Tightwad Gazette" types. The only real difficulty is that we had to buy a decent sized house to have enough bedrooms for everyone (and that with nobody having a room to themself), and shortly after we got the house, my husband's child support got more than doubled, because the ex lied about several factors in her expenses. But I won't bother you with those details.
As for attachment parenting, the way I figure it, you are an attachment parent if you decide to be an attachment parent. There are a lot of parents who parent very closely, but follow their instincts, and personally I don't think that's "attachment parenting." Not if you aren't looking to some book to tell you how to do it. Because if you are following your instincts, you have the freedom to decide that a crib is better if co-sleeping isn't working for you, or to continue co-sleeping. You have the freedom to decide when to quit breastfeeding based on your and your child's needs, rather than what the book tells you.
About four months ago, when my son was just about a year old, a friend of mine (whose daughter was the same age) expressed some thoughts about her own attachment parenting. She cannot leave her daughter with Dad, because the baby has to be within 5 feet of the breast at every moment of every day. I think this is terribly unfair to Baby and Daddy, because it denies them the opportunity to do much bonding. Also, this baby was still not crawling or scooting, because she'd never had floor time.
I think it's neat when a parent loves being very close to his or her baby; but it makes me nervous when they follow a book that makes rules against allowing the baby any connections with anyone else, even the other parent, or rules against allowing the child the independence to learn how to do normal baby things like crawling and walking. I guess that's why I wouldn't refer to following your instincts as "attachment parenting." I believe YOU are best qualified to make these decisions, based on your relationship with your entire family, and your and your baby's needs.
---Christina