Anonymous wrote:You cant go for 2-3 days and be resilient and kind enough to just...sit with your parents? Take games, books, teach your kids to be bored. Bring gifts to wrap there. Drive to Starbucks or order it. I don't see the problem. You sound like a brat. FWIW I am a 40-something mom with teens.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t go. Life is too short and you only get so many holidays with your kids. Enjoy the time!
Anonymous wrote:My parents have been in the same house for 40+ years in my cookie-cutter hometown. We're visiting for Christmas and DH and I have agreed this is not how we want to spend future holidays when we have time off. The kids are older and get antsy after two days. The only thing of interest to do is drive or take the metro into the big nearby city, but even that has gotten old. For those who are also obliged to spend their time off more or less sitting in their parents living room eating coffee cake being asked questions about people you haven't seen in decades, how do you cope?
This isn't even a walkable place with a pretty downtown with Christmas lights and coffee shops and bookstores. Walking around there isn't even safe. It's a sprawling suburb off a busy road that no one in their right mind would want to walk. No paved walkway for pedestrians. You're literally tiptoeing on a narrow dirt path through weeds to get to a Starbucks a mile away. My parents, of course, think it's a wonderful place and don't understand why we are bored or ask about meeting elsewhere for the holidays. I've suggested cruises, meeting up in a pretty tourist destination, anything. But they refuse.
Anonymous wrote:You have the Christmas of your dreams elsewhere and you visit your family at another time of the year.
Your parents live there because the cost of living is lower. You don't want them to move somewhere more expensive, because that might mean you need to pony up. So compromise: you visit at a time that's convenient for your family, take books/work/homework and whatnot.
Bonus: perhaps you not coming for Holidays one year will push them to leave their home and come to where you are. Or not. Maybe they can't travel anymore. But you don't need to feel trapped and resentful. You just need to see your parents regularly, not necessarily at Christmas.