Wouldn't you want him to? |
His side of the family..not the in-laws. |
She's not the only person involved, though. Her husband wants to help his brother, and babysit the kids. |
| Six month anniversary and asking for a weekend away from the kids who lost their mother is a red flag. I think you are conflating your grief with picking up on something that isn't right. |
This is a very good suggestion, and I'd include OP's husband as well. |
| If you don’t want to, then don’t. However, if I was in your shoes, I would think more about the children. I would welcome such a wonderful woman willing to be in the children lives. I would also want to be around the kids more as an aunt, to help fill that female role for them. |
Good lord. He asked his brother to watch his kids. OP is his brother's wife. I can't decide which is more prevalent in this thread: a) the lack or reading comprehension; b) the stupidity; or c) the outright insanity. OP, I'm sorry it's so tough. You seem like you know what the right thing to do is, and as another PP suggested, having an honest, non-judgmental conversation with your BIL may be helpful. |
+1 I would feel no guilt over asking him to ask his own parents for a child free weekend. You have a right to the time it takes to process your feelings OP. |
|
Really folks? If the OP tells the BIL that they can’t or won’t, that sets up a horrible mess between the two brothers. Would you ask your spouse to lie to their brother about why you don’t want to watch the kids? Or would you be okay with your husband saying no because you are uncomfortable with the dating?
Tell your spouse that you are still grieving snd although you know your family needs to watch them, ask for some alone time that weekend to process your own feelings. Maybe go for a walk on drop off so you don’t fixate on the new girlfriend or be there in tears. Do something that relaxes you for part of the weekend. |
I guess it would work better if OP’s brother really did take on the bulk of childcare during the weekend so that OP can really get some time alone, but we all know that the woman in a given relationship is usually the one that ends up giving the most of her time and energy for the kids. If that were not the norm (statistically) I’m sure most posters would be encouraging OP to accommodate BIL’s requests. |
Did you miss the part about how OP and her husband watch the kids often? |
Op is allowed to say no this one time if she or her dh don't want to do it. Just because you do it frequently doesn't mean you aren't allowed to say no. |
He asked his own brother and brother’s wife. How is that not his own family? |
No one has suggested that she is obligated to watch them. But (i) she does, often, (ii) the reasons she is hesitating this time have nothing to do with timing, logistics, lack of desire to see them, or anything regarding the kids themselves. It's entirely about how she feels about her BIL's new relationship. Furthermore, if you actually read the damned post, she's not looking for reassurance that she can decline. She doesn't intend on declining. She wrote, "So help me DCUM, help me do the right thing here, and help me not be resentful and be welcoming to his girlfriend." So your simpleton comments about her being "allowed" to decline are both nonresponsive and counterproductive. This thread really have brought out the worst in DCUM. |
| If she’s a good woman, your SIL would likely be happy they are together. I know that I would be comforted knowing that my motherless kids would one day have a loving stepmom if I could not be there for them. My DH could take care of them, but I’d still want them to have a mother figure that loves them. Who knows how this will turn out, but a happy ending is not a bad thing for the most important people involved, the kids. |