Yes OP, how old is your son? I'm guessing if he's only practicing a sport once a week he's either (1) young or (2) not very advanced. I'm not saying that to be mean, it's just a fact that once a week practices are rare once you get older and more advanced. I respect the commitments we've made during the week such as sports and I likely wouldn't entertain missing it for something like this, but honestly it's the 7 pm birthday at a place an hour away during the week that would have me saying no (again, assuming your kid is young). If he's 12 and just started a sport then maybe I'd let it go, although I would care how he felt about it. |
If it was my own mom I would tell her she’s being ridiculous! I would offer to have dinner with her just the two of us on the day of her birthday. Then I would invite her to celebrate with my family over the weekend and make a special day if it - an outing that she likes with family in addition to dinner. I would hope DH could have the same type of conversation with his mom. Presumably after a lifetime of being in each other’s lives they can have a conversation??? |
Yep. “Logistical issues” are nbd to miss practice but suddenly your MIL’s birthday is THE time to dig in? I’m not saying you’re 100% wrong but I also don’t feel you are right about this. |
It doesn't put OP in the middle. OP is making a decision to insert herself into this. DH: "Honey, mom's really putting her foot down on the day of at 6 p.m. What do you think?" OP COULD JUST: *Shrug.* I don't have a really strong opinion. [As evidenced by the fact that she is here asking what her opinion should be.] I think X and Y are possible solutions. Think it over, make a decision, talk to her and then let me know what we're doing. |
+1 |
+1. I'd go to the birthday. |
-1000 I’m so sick of old people playing the “I could be DEAD soon card.” Guess what? We could all die in a car accident tomorrow - maybe on the way to the faraway restaurant... Realistically, a healthy 60-something will be around for another 2 decades - at least. Should the grandchildren’s entire childhood revolve around Grandma’s whims?? And even if you are right and grandma gets dementia in 5 years - the family will be able to look back fondly at the time they celebrated grandma’s birthday. Nobody will care (or remember!) that it was 48 hours before or after the actual date. |
IA. After age 21 no adult should make a big deal out of their birthday unless it's a milestone bday (30, 40, etc.). I'm currently on my cousin's sh!t list because I couldn't make it to her 32nd birthday party that was held on a Wednesday evening in DC at a bar near her office (I'm in VA). |
I think it’s weird that:
Dinner with her son isn’t good enough. She demands her grandchildren there yet isn’t flexible. She would want her grandchildren to sacrifice an activity to celebrate something that can be celebrated on a different day. What if the tables were turned and the mom thought it was ok for her son to skip long-standing dinner plans with grandma to attend an activity with a friend? Should he, since he can have dinner with grandma the following day? |
+2. Curious about what “logistical issues” means. And it’s not like MIL’s birthday was just announced; presumably it’s the same date every year. Do you usually celebrate on the day? If so, this is not a surprise. |
So exactly this. |
Family. Sports. You have to ask? |
Same could be said about a sports practice. "Hey Aiden, remember that great soccer practice back in Feb. of 2019?? Yeah, it was awesome." |
Read the post before you respond with something nonsensical. PP is saying the family WILL REMEMBER celebrating Grandma’s birthday down the line - especially if they make it a nice event on the weekend. A rushed stressful dinner on a school night will not have the same nostalgia - it’ll be more like “you know, the dementia started earlier than we thought....” |
Inflexible family. Team sports. There is no reason OP’s situation needs to be a conflict. If MIL would make a small compromise in time or place, rather than creating a test of everyone’s fealty to her, there would be no conflict. |