Dead Parent's Birthdays

Anonymous
Not a reasonable expectation. I don’t keep track of my spouse’s living parents’ birthdays. That’s his responsibility.
Anonymous
I can guarantee my spouse could not tell you when my parents' birthdays are. He didn't acknowledge their birthdays when they were alive so I would not expect him to now that they have passed.
Anonymous
My mom's birthday was the same day as DH's dad's birthday and every year when I would point this out it was like he was hearing this information for the first time.

So in other words, no.
Anonymous
No
Anonymous
My dad’s birthday, yes. But only because it’s also our wedding anniversary. Birthdays are not a big deal to DH and most years he doesn’t even remember to call his own parents on theirs. I’m not sure he knows when my moms birthday is and that’s ok with me.
Anonymous
I know FIL’s is a couple days after DHs and MILs is the first few days of the new year. But I’ll be honest if I didn’t have those dates to tie them to….I don’t know if I’d be able to pinpoint them so closely
Anonymous
Stop this! Live for today.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Yes or No:

Would you think a spouse of 15+ years would rememeber/remark/acknowledge on your dead parent's birthday?


I wish OPs would post their real issues instead of vague "survey questions" like this. Your spouse forgot or doesn't acknowleged or know your dead parent's birthday. Did you wait and wait on that day, hoping and expecting your spouse would say something to you? And then spouse didn't and you're angry? I get it, I truly do. But isn't it possible that your expectations are skewed by your own grief and desire for someone other than yourself to remember your parent, OP? I say that kindly, as someone who always remembers my own late parents' (and grandmother's) birthdays. I want to feel that they mattered to others who can still remember them as we all get older and the memory of loved ones starts to fade. If your spouse doesn't remember or remark on a date that is meaningful to you, then tell your spouse, "I'm still grieving this loss and want to acknowledge Parent's life more. Next year I'd like us both to...." Then fill in the blank with some action that would memorialize your parent well. Contribute to a charity he or she would have appreciated, in his or her name. Plant a bunch of bulbs in a corner of the yard, with flowers in colors your parent liked. Eat at his or her favorite restaurant or cook one of their favorite foods. Whatever works, simple or complex. But involve your spouse and speak up. And ask your spouse if there's anyone he or she would like to memorialize annually. But don't expect your spouse to remember dates, necessarily. Make those dates into something tangible you both DO rather than just days you wait for a verbal acknowledgement and when it doesn't come, you're hurt.

For years after my grandmother (who lived in my parents' household for 45 years and helped raise me) died, I sent my mother flowers on my grandmother's birthday. My mom appreciated knowing I remembered them both on that day. Can you do something like that with someone else who knew your late parent? To take some of the expectation around this date off your spouse and just share acknowledgement with someone else in your life?
Anonymous
No. I only vaguely know when my in-laws' birthdays are, and my husband is the same with mine. If my spouse wanted to do something on that date, I would obviously support that, but I probably wouldn't remember on my own.
Anonymous
If you want to memorialize on a certain day, then plan it, and do it, and invite your SO to join you. Don't make it an expectation for them to track it.


It's great to remember people and tell others about them on their birthday. Keep it loving and positive.
Anonymous
No- my in-laws were jerks, and I have no idea when they had bdays (dh was adopted).
Anonymous
Tossing in some total weirdness for this thread--

No, because my dead father reminds me on his actual birthday that he's around. Yesterday was his birthday---I mentioned it to my DH of 18 years.



Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Yes or No:

Would you think a spouse of 15+ years would rememeber/remark/acknowledge on your dead parent's birthday?


No. Newsflash: they don’t care about your parent, let alone remembering a dead old person’s birthday
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Yes or No:

Would you think a spouse of 15+ years would rememeber/remark/acknowledge on your dead parent's birthday?


No.
Anonymous
My spouse and their siblings recognize/celebrate both dead parents birthdays. I find it weird. The person is dead, giving a call and saying, "remember when mom/dad did that thing" is one thing, but most of the rest is over the top. Now if it's just been one year, and you have to do the gravestone per Judaism, that's one thing. But it's been over a decade (2 decades for one of them)
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