This. The triangulation here is dysfunctional and you are stoking that dysfunction. Your children can walk away, not engage, etc. Sibling relationships are challenging, more so when one child perceives themselves on the outside with parents, but it’s not your job to referee as a parent. Don’t get involved because your biases and what not will be present and create rivalry amongst your kids. |
Not to put too fine a point on it, but: you don’t get to be “a human being with feelings” first. You are a parent first. It has been this way since your first child was an infant; this can’t be news. |
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Middle child syndrome? I think birth order may have something to do with it.
Lost in the shuffle. Not sure which tribe of siblings they fit in with. It has been this way their whole life. |
I would pay for any vacation with us. Not paying otherwise once they are adults. |
| How many siblings are in this family? At least 5? |
| To restate the question: I have a child who is struggling and has been for a long time. I understandably am tired or dealing with the challenges of this difficult child when my other children are easier. Can I exclude the difficult child who has been struggling in life for a long time from our family vacation and still be a good mom? |
| Dropping out of college and a few minor traffic violations are neither here nor there. These are all just red herrings when it comes to the crux of the issue: that this adult child treated people poorly to the point of tears on last year's vacation, and the OP is trying to avoid a repeat. A question: why are the older siblings done with this person? And how many vacations has this child's hostility ruined? If last year was a one-off, the OP might invite the middle child with the stipulation that there are standards for everyone's behavior. But if last year wasn't an aberration, then the OP has every right to prioritize the well-being of the other kids in the family. |
That's not a given. ~ Peacemaker middle child with a cranky first sibling |
Parenting is a tough job. Don't feel like you are a bad mom for feeling exhausted. |
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I think the kid accepting the invite shows they are seeking connection with the family. Yes, even if it’s a nice vacation, I think most people who actually hate their families and don’t want a relationship would decline.
Clearly they are not doing well and they probably are in a dark place and not fun to be around. But in my opinion, it would be pretty cruel to exclude one child from a family vacation because they are struggling. I would invite them and use it as an opportunity to know them better or would cancel it. |
So they chose to be adult so they can live adult life and that is paying for own vacation. If currently on drugs, consider message you are sending other children for what parents will enable. |
I have a sibling who has struggled for a long time and, even at their best, is fairly unpleasant to be around. I am deeply sympathetic to how hard that must be on our parents, even though I also see how they contribute to this dynamic. If it's a family vacation, you invite the whole family. Believe me, I'm happier when my sibling chooses not to join for these things, but excluding from a family vacation would likely weaken the relationship even further. +1 to seeing a therapist with strong understanding of family dynamics, if you're not already. You absolutely get to be a human being with feelings. Good therapy can really help with setting the boundaries that allow you to be that feeling human being and treating your difficult kid as equitably as possible. |
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It sounds difficult, OP.
I would extend invite ( you have to be ok if they say yes) but I’d also state that while you’d like them to be with their family they did not seem that interested last year so they are under no obligation to go. If they’d like to, then say that’s wonderful and let’s also talk about how to make it good for all. Ground rules. If they break the ground rules, they need to leave. Would that work? |
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I agree with the poster who said if you don't invite them and invite your other children you've created a FOREVER rift with your child.
I would invite them. You love them and they are YOUR family, so go on vacation and don't take things they say personally. Honestly there is a VERY short window left for family vacations. Within a decade the family vacation your kids take will be with THEIR families - spouse, children. I have a tween who doesn't appreciate me and what I do for her. She may never. But I promised to love her unconditionally and I will. No child promises to love their parent. They didn't ask for us. But I wished for her and to be a mom, so my job is to love her. Barring physical abuse, I'd never cut her off. I might decide to only take a vacation with my husband if her verbal and emotional abuse was too much for a family vacation. But I would never go on a family vacation with out her because of her not appreciating what I give her or only being interested in me when I am giving her something. If she is a drag, well, she is a drag. I still lover her, |
| Do not invite the problem child. It's ok to remove your kids from your life if you need to. You have a chance to be free, take it! |