Anonymous wrote:My mother is similar. Comes to visit and wants to do shopping and lunches. Makes constant comments about how miserable I must be with the “crazy schedule” I have of kid activities. (Each kid does one extracurricular -neither of which is excessive.)
She’s not interested in spending much time with my kids aside from getting the obligatory cute grandkids pictures to share with her friend group.
I look at other people whose parents are involved and engaged grandparents and I just feel sad. I would have so much more time for her if she spent it with my family and my kids. We used to be so close but it’s hard to have a deep relationship with someone who isn’t interested in my kids at all or who subtly implies she resents them. I chalk it up to being a selfish boomer. Which is probably unfair.
Anonymous wrote:the older generation often made a lot of mistakes, at least in my case. As a senior in HS, I told my parents to sell our townhome and move to a cheaper area and a smaller apartment. they refused. every bit of advice--refused. now my mom is in a nursing home and I have to clean up their house that is in a reverse mortgage. fun times
Anonymous wrote:Once you become an adult and have kids, you are a parent before you are a son or daughter. It's not either or, but you kids come first.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, they kinda are competition for your time. I don't think you have to put up with rude behavior or give your parent what they want. But there's only so many hours in the day.
I think a lot of aging parents feel anxiety that their future needs will be more than their support people can willingly handle.