This is pretty much where I come out. |
It's clear to all that the only one who is off here is you. Most people understand that grief is unique to everyone. Just because OP is not experiencing it the exact way you experienced it, does not make her "off". |
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OP, I was invited to a baby shower about 5 months after my infant died. My friends said they'd understand if I didn't want to attend. After some deliberation, I decided to attend.
And it was incredibly hard - not because it was a baby shower, but because I was still incredibly heartbroken about my child and after the first month or so, it seemed like everyone just expected me to move on as if nothing happened. And then I had to act the opposite of the way I felt inside. Here I was at this happy baby shower and everyone is laughing, joking and having a good time, and inside I never felt more alone and sad as I did in that moment. And I really tried to make small talk about things that truly seemed nonsensical to me - things that did not matter, and act "normal" for the sake of my friends. But it was all hollow and awkward and stilted. And I could not even bring up any of my real self to that event, because it would have been a downer, and frankly, inappropriate at such a celebratory occasion. I cried a lot afterwards, when I was finally alone. I am glad my friends invited me, but I also know they would have understood if I decided not to go. For me, at that time, even though I did not know it, I was not prepared or ready for that kind of occasion. I don't regret going but I do think that experience made me want to avoid social gatherings of any kind for a while. I'm fully aware there are plenty of people who would have been fine at such an event, and maybe found comfort in it. I did not. Do what feels right for you, not what you think everyone expects of you. |
OP never said she is being asked to plan. Why did you need to hear that? |
She didn’t actually. She complained that her husband and his sister were planning the party. There is no indication at all that she was involved in the planning. Anyway I think OP needs to just suck it up. |
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I say this as someone who lost both parents in quick succession as a young adult: Socializing in the weeks/first couple of months after their deaths was some of the hardest time I've ever spent.
That said, I think it's important to go. As much as I'd dread it, opting out is not the example I'd want to set for my kids. Showing up for your people matters. |
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OP I’m sorry about your loss and I’m sorry you’re receiving such callous replies.
This birthday party is like any other event— an invitation is not a summons. If you are up to it, attend, if you are not up to it, send regrets. A mother in law who begrudges you your grief because of her birthday party lacks emotional maturity and compassion. My mother in law would understand, and my mother would understand if my husband didn’t attend her birthday after losing his mother. The bigger worry I have is that your husband seems a bit oblivious to your pain. |
Only if you have a MIL that uses purity tests to determine who is loyal to her. Which is sociopathic. |
I think YOU are off for demanding that OP do something that will exacerbate her sadness. Do you drink tears for breakfast? What's wrong with you? |
DP. Exagerrations like this undermine your point by making you look childish and ridiculous. |
OP did not say she is suffering from crippling grief. She just wanted to know if her feeling of childish envy, her words, makes her a terrible person. The answer to that is no. And OP didn't actually say she wasn't going to the party, she is just having feelings of "wanting nothing to do with it." She just wants validation that she doesn't need to be super excited about the party. She never said she wasn't going. So many posters here see "mom died" and immediately retreat into their own memory of grief, yet never read the actual poster's question. They are projecting their own feelings and probably their own memory of grief onto OP. Some of us are reacting to OP's actual words and question. OP said she is feeling childish and envious, and wonders if that is bad. That is totally different from lying in bed immobile from despair unable to face the world and asking should I attend a party. If OP had said her mother just died and she is having a terrible time dealing with it and cannot function in the world yet, she would be getting different responses. What she actually said is that she is jealous that her husband's mother is gets to have a birthday. What she asked is if that makes her a terrible person. She is allowed to feel what she is feeling, of course, and that does not make her terrible. But actually acting on that particular emotion - envy - is, as OP herself said, childish. |
She didn't complain about either thing. She simply asked if if was OK that she not "feeling it" because she is envious that they still have a living mother. |
My mother died when I was in college. That was over 20 years ago. I still have these thoughts sometimes today. You aren't a bad person. It's normal. I am so sorry for the loss of your mom. |