Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should stop relying on her for such a basic thing as food. Buy and cook your own food. Let Grandma be a grandma.
My husband is no longer with us and she's happy to do it. She's the one who suggested helping out this way and she's doing it so I'm not going to complain or buy and cook my own food when I have someone else to do it and the kids are thriving and I'm busy from morning to night with them and work. But thanks for not helping and being snarky.
OP, if this is truly how you felt, you wouldn't have started this friend. I am a different poster, but PP's response was spot on. On a day-to-day basis, you can't rely on your mom to have bought food and prepared meals. So you need some sort of stop-gap. Either stock up on some frozen meals or make some meals to freeze so you have options on the days that your mother doesn't provide food. Would your mother stick to a meal plan for the week if you create it together? That way you would know which days she can't cook? If she really won't communicate with you, her "help" actually becomes more of a problem/burden.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should stop relying on her for such a basic thing as food. Buy and cook your own food. Let Grandma be a grandma.
My husband is no longer with us and she's happy to do it. She's the one who suggested helping out this way and she's doing it so I'm not going to complain or buy and cook my own food when I have someone else to do it and the kids are thriving and I'm busy from morning to night with them and work. But thanks for not helping and being snarky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should stop relying on her for such a basic thing as food. Buy and cook your own food. Let Grandma be a grandma.
My husband is no longer with us and she's happy to do it. She's the one who suggested helping out this way and she's doing it so I'm not going to complain or buy and cook my own food when I have someone else to do it and the kids are thriving and I'm busy from morning to night with them and work. But thanks for not helping and being snarky.
Wow, you're sure defensive. I wasn't being snarky at all. What she's doing isn't helping. She's happy to do something that's not helpful. I am also a single mom, and feeding my kids fast food on any sort of regular (weekly/monthly) basis is unacceptable to me. I make time to buy food for myself and my kids. That's my responsibility as an adult and a parent to minor children. I take time to cook food and prep so we have things we can eat semi-quickly. If you're so hard up for money that you need this from your mom, maybe flip it and buy the food and let her reimburse you for it. But overall, her "help" is not "helping".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should stop relying on her for such a basic thing as food. Buy and cook your own food. Let Grandma be a grandma.
My husband is no longer with us and she's happy to do it. She's the one who suggested helping out this way and she's doing it so I'm not going to complain or buy and cook my own food when I have someone else to do it and the kids are thriving and I'm busy from morning to night with them and work. But thanks for not helping and being snarky.
Anonymous wrote:If it's not working for you, you have to let her know. Can you ask her to do something else instead? Limit her help to watching the kids while you get groceries?
My mom was very helpful to us when both our kids were tiny. She cooked meals and watched them as needed and overall was just a godsend. It sounds like what your mom is doing is not really reducing stress in your life, but adding different ones to it.
Anonymous wrote:Give her another task that doesn’t involve food.
How about picking up your kids from school, camp grandma on days off etc?
Anonymous wrote:I think you should stop relying on her for such a basic thing as food. Buy and cook your own food. Let Grandma be a grandma.