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The other thing some people may not know or remember is that in some areas, waiting lists for good day care are months or even years long.
This would be unacceptable in my opinion (unless it was a rare occurrence for special circumstances). You are a consumer paying for a service and you deserve to get what you pay for. If a classroom teacher were bringing her infant to school daily - she would be fired.
Also, I don't think that it's the parent's job to help the coach figure out her childcare situation. If she chooses to ask sone gym families on her own then she can, but I don't think that I would volunteer or suggest what she should do with her child. Watching someone else's child is a tremendous responsibility and one that most new parents are especially sensitive about.
I think that the only option is to directly ask her what her long term plan is. Based on her response, you can choose to ride it out (if it was a very short term situation) or start looking for a new gym. Even the best coach in the world is not the best when they are constantly distracted.
Just to clarify - I believe that compromise is a great option; however, I don't believe that it is the parent's job to initiate or suggest that option. In my experience, most new mothers are very defensive about their parenting (as they should be) but if future relationships with this coach are critical, then I would tread lightly (unless you personally want to volunteer to babysit during practice). Personally, someone telling me all the things I should/could do with my infant would have upset and bothered me (but maybe that's just because I don't accept criticism well). I think that direct communication to gather all the facts is best. She might already have plans for the child that start in the next week or so that would solve the problem. If not, you've heard from other posters what the future picture most likely will look like.Right. If you live in a major metropolitan area, sure. But let's say you live in Maine where level 8-10 coaches are few and far between and the choice may realistically be driving this coach out of the job or helping them out or accepting. Because those may the three scenarios. I don't think the OP's concerns are unreasonable but I'm also not sure some people "get" the reality of the situation which is there is a very good chance the OP ends up with no coach at his child's level at all. I don't know where he lives in Maine but there aren't a lot of high level gyms, so...this is not that simple. My prediction is there is a good chance the coach is coaching because they feel bad leaving the girls at this level without options. Compromise is likely the best scenario here.
That is brilliantAt our gym we have a coach who does a barter system so someone can watch his toddler while he coaches and he gives private lessons in return. I think it's a win-win!