This is like throwing away a favorite lovey.
I left my favorite lovey on the seat at a restaurant when I was 6 and my grandpa wouldn't let me go back inside to retrieve it (we were in the parking lot, so not far away). I cried myself to sleep for weeks missing that lovey. It still hurts a little. Nothing else from childhood effected me the way that did. It's the only thing i think of when people talk about my grandpa. |
If grandma wants to be a jerk. So, be it. You can tell your mom that she can decide to be a part of the problem or the solution. Her choice. Whatever plans you had today are canceled. So, if you were planning to go to the American History museum with the grandparents- that’s on hold. Today, you take your kid to the LEGO store and buy a new set. You tell your kid that grandma was wrong to take apart his structure and you’re going to help fix it. Then you all spend the afternoon building together. Grandpa is welcome to help. Same for grandma. But if she wants to pout, you ignore her geriatric tantrum and make it a fun day for your kid. |
"on a mission" parents/g-parents - clock ticking, time to go, already in parking lot, already in car, time to clean-up, learn a lesson.... |
Oh, no! Why would he do that? |
She didn't maliciously kill the family pet. Jeez. |
6 is pretty young for a tough lesson. |
See, we don't know. Maybe he was feeling sick. |
To teach her "a lesson" and "harden her up." Which it did, just not the lesson and hardening grandpa expected. Unless you grow up with these sorts of parents and grandparents, you don't understand. |
OP—update? |
Grandma seems psycho. I would simply discard the whole thing and start fresh. And maybe send granny home.
I am a professional artist and something like this would make me livid. However I have learned through the years that most people have little respect for things that are handmade. The housekeepers seem to want to destroy them. I lock everything in a cabinet before they come. |
This is all great advice if you want your kid to grow up like a fragile and entitled child. Sheesh. Stuff happens. Grandma says sorry and buys him new legos and everyone gets on with their lives.
Or Grandma gets a real scolding from mom and then apologizes and helps grandson rebuild precious precious LEGO creations, teaching him the he’s the center of the universe, that he doesn’t have the coping skills to move forward when life happens, and that grandma sucks and she owes him. Which scenario do you prefer? Choose wisely bc you’ll have to repeat it whenever a sibling, parent, young child, or play date accidentally breaks his legos or anything else he deems special. Hell of a way to live. |
Maybe you are a terrible artist if everyone wants to discard your art! |
I’m sure the grandmother would recognize it as an accident and get over it! You think she would demand an apology and demand the offending party sit there with her and glue china back together? Of course not. It’s a setback. Teach your child the skills to move on. |
+1. The lesson son is going to learn is whether mom will defend son, or whether mom lines up with grandma’s “no big deal and it’s your fault anyway nonsense.” Grandma is a lost cause here anyway. |
+1. The cleaning was a mistake. Her comment to grandson was unacceptable. Not her place to decide that toys need to be picked up. |