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Reply to "If your parents help you out, are they happily married?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Reading some of the comments. Why are your parents and Il laws [b]responsible [/b]for providing time so you can work on your marriage? Why can't you swap with friends or hire out? I always thought the primary purpose of have helpful and engaged grandparents was fostering the relationship between the grandchild and grandparent- not providing couple time for the parents. This must be a relatively new concept- post Gen X.[/quote] They are not RESPONSIBLE, but it's a really thoughtful gesture. I don't think anyone would say that the grand parents are responsible, but there are grandparents out there who do say, "It's important/good/healthy for you and DH to get out once in a while. Go, have fun, and we'll take care of the kids." This is such a stark difference compared to grandparents (like mine), who flat out refuse to babysit because they are DONE with child-rearing. Just wondering what produces such a different attitude in grandparents. Personally, I hope to be more like the former when my kids grow up and have kids of their own.[/quote] I am not agreeing with you, OP. I am the 9:28 poster. I am a capable adult and I can manage my marriage just fine, thanks, b/c my parents raised me that way and I don't need their help in that regard. I feel it sounds needy of you to view it that way. That would feel intrusive to me, in fact.[/quote] [b]Interesting that you would characterize this as needy as opposed to nice or helpful. IMO, there is a little too much insularity and not enough community when it comes to families being there for each other these days, not just in times of crisis.[/b] [/quote] I can agree with this, but with the trend of grandparents caring for grandchildren (or parents helping out their children, who are now parents), this is generally a one-way street. For people that have parents or other relatives that help out, do you give back? Do you also make it important to return help, or just give help to your parents and relatives? Most of the time, people expect their parents and relatives to help out, even if it's only on occasion (1-2x a week is not "on occasion"), but there's no reciprocity. I'm not a grandparent, but I'm in my 30s with deceased parents. I feel like a lot of people in my generation take their own parents for granted. Sure, I understand a lot of people have toxic families and that's a different dynamic. But for those fellow adults that have a decent relationship with their family and still expect their parents to take care of them... that's mind boggling to me. Your parents have done their job. Your kids are your own responsibility. Family being there for each other is a great concept, but it has to go both ways. Even if you're an adult, and your parents are adults - it's gotta be reciprocal. [/quote] In my family, the understanding is that you pay it forward, not reciprocally--although gratitude and thankfulness are expected.[/quote]
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