Anonymous wrote:What did you say when you communicated to your relatives that your family would be staying home? I’m wondering why they had such a strong reaction.
How often does your family see these relatives? Only at holidays or throughout the year?
Also, are you jumping at the chance to stay home because you don’t enjoy their company either or are you simply willing to stay home because you don’t want to leave ds alone on holidays?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is DS? What is it that you want your parents and siblings to understand?
Are there special needs at play?
15 yo DS. No special needs, just an introverted boy with a small circle of friends who share his interests. My parents want him to be "like them". "Why doesn't Larlo ever do this (play a sport, watch a game,play with his cousins, talk to his cousins)". Just a long list of "why is he like this?" I tried explaining what being an introvert is like and they don't seem to get it. I want them to understand that it is OK to not always wanting to be around people. They see him as being rude, "he treats us with disdain".
Anonymous wrote:Absent special circumstances, like abuse or some special needs, there is no way I’d allow my 14 year old to decide to disrupt family traditions so he can play video games. Sometimes you have to do things that you don’t feel like doing when you’re part of a family.
I can’t imagine how you told your family that you weren’t coming so your kid could spend the day playing video games. No wonder they are hurt. It’s not like some great opportunity came up.
Anonymous wrote:Is this pronouncement out of the blue? Was there any recent interactions with either grandparent that was the last straw? MS or HS? If the latter, this does type of preference (stay in alone reading and playing video games) may not bode well for college freshman experience (reading these and other parent boards).
Anonymous wrote:How old is DS? What is it that you want your parents and siblings to understand?
Are there special needs at play?