Is this OP? Is she the one with the adopted child? If so, why wasn’t that in the initial post? |
| OP, I am a 49 y.o. woman who forgot to call her parents today. I don't celebrate Easter anymore, so it truly just slipped my mind. I always call my parents on Mondays and I was super busy this weekend and a friend dropped by this afternoon, and I just forgot. 😞 |
| I went to dinner with my mom tonight. I called her later to be sure she got home. She said I was the last number on her caller id from yesterday. The world is just a colder place unfortunately |
Do you always opt for ignoring what was said in order to make yourself into some kind of victim? Geez, no wonder your child is exhausted and wants nothing to do with you, and no one else does either. Enjoy your loneliness- you earned it, baby. |
It didn’t take long for an a-hole to pipe in because a parent expects a level of humanity from their offspring. No wonder everyone is so drugged up just to get through their day. |
Exactly this. These people can put on a good act but they have zero empathy as a natural state of existing |
|
It was Easter yesterday, not her birthday or Mother’s Day. When I was a young adult without kids of my own, Easter was another day. I did nothing to celebrate it or acknowledge it. It didn’t even cross my mind. I had very special memories of it growing up because it involved hiding eggs, finding baskets, and lots of candy. I now acknowledge Easter because I have kids and it’s a holiday that is fun for kids. It has no religious significance to me.
It says a lot about the OP that she expects someone else to fulfill her emotional needs. This is not about reciprocity. This is the OP being disappointed because her adult child isn’t living her life according to the OP’s values around Easter and how she thinks it should be acknowledged. This type of behavior breeds resentment. Just accept that Easter is not a big deal for your adult child. It doesn’t have anything to do with you. |
| Why didn't you just call her to say Happy Easter? The I mailed a card, but I expect a phone call rubs me the wrong way. I boomer expectation that they don't call their kids, but wait pissed off for the phone calls. |
|
Your child owes you absolutely nothing, OP. You owe yourself and your daughter therapy so you stop placing your emotional baggage on her. Find your own partner and friends. I truly cannot believe you are blaming your loneliness on her.
You get the relationship you create with your children. It is EXCEEDINGLY RARE for a child to stop contact without a valid reason. My mother is like you. She doesn't speak to us or care at all unless it's a holiday. And then we're supposed to bend over backwards for her and her expectations. She has NEVER spent time with her grandchildren. EVER. Yet we're supposed to do what she says for a performance? Some pictures?? Absolutely not. You need to ask yourself why you're alone. Leave your daughter out of it. |
| This has little to do with a missed holiday greeting and more to do with the relationship overall. If you had a great relationship with your daughter and she forgot to call yesterday, you wouldn’t have cared. |
OP, the only a-hole here is YOU. Stop acting like your daughter "lacks humanity" because she doesnt want to deal with your entitled, draining, grating self. There is a reason she and everyone else avoided you on Easter and it has everything to do with your own lack of humanity or respect for others. |
Yep. And so much of it is just performative respect. You can see the OP here has ZERO curiosity as to why her daughter might not have called- whether it's because she's busy with a new, fun romance in her life, or because she's upset with OP, or because she's caught up with work, traveling, etc. OP doesnt give a s**t, which is why she hasnt asked any questions about it, she just wants her daughter to performatively kiss the ring and call/text her so she can feel important. It's not about any genuine love, concern, or respect she has for her daughter, and all about an entitlement to her time and attention. |
I just don't buy that with 30% of young adults cutting off a parent. I don't believe that 30% of parents are so awful that they should be excised from the life of ACs. Absolutely there are valid reasons, but too many people jump into it. |
Well, no. If they don't, it is OK to be disappointed. |
“Exactly the way you want them to” is the key phrase. OP sent a card. Her daughter doesn’t necessarily know what she’s expected to do next. If OP wanted a text or a phone call, she should have texted or called. |