Basically: I am supposed to take 2YO DD to my parents' house this weekend, and I find myself dreading it and making every excuse to cancel. Am I being overly dramatic here? WWYD?
1. My parents are 2-3 hours away if traffic's not bad. So to make the trip worth it, we really need to leave Sat AM and come home Sunday PM. DH is scheduled to work all weekend... so in some ways it's ideal, in other ways "OMG don't make me do this without you". To make it clear, going down for the weekend will cost me 1/3 of the time I get to spend with DH in the WHOLE WEEK (Sat PM). They moved away, so I have no ties to their current area (no friends to visit over there, etc). There's also NOTHING TO DO
2. They make no effort to adjust their schedule/lifestyle to DD. To make it clear, they are always asking for us to visit, it's not like I'm foisting this upon them. But I guarantee you there will be happy hour, late dinner, evening party... none of which she is interested in for more than 10 mins. So I spend the entire time chasing her and keeping her pacified so she can be the adorable little grandchild they want to show off. This means I am not socializing with my parents (who are busy drinking and socializing with their friends) or anyone else (who I don't know anyway). These plans are never discussed with me ahead of time, just sold as "put your coats on."
3. They claim that they are desperate to see DD, but then don't interact with her It's weird, b/c my father was a very hands-on dad... but he'll just say "Hey kiddo" and then ignore DD. My mom will shower her with (unwanted, inappropriate) gifts and take pictures, but nothing that requires setting down her drink. DD is a very physically active kid and we can't even go for walks in the neighborhood (b/c "we have to stop in and see XYZ" which leads to the drinking and socializing above). I just feel like saying, I can send you a picture, it's basically the same thing.
4. This is the real issue. Until very recently, my adult, drug addicted, violent, convicted felon brother lived with them (he's in jail right now but will be out shortly). DH and I have made it clear that he WILL NOT BE AROUND DD. But of course he'll move right back in once he's out. I know my parents are going to want to vent/talk/discuss the situation, and frankly I am so done with it. I just can't take it any more. They know that he takes advantage of them, and they know that they enable him, but they continue to do so and I don't see it ever stopping. They have poured all their love and attention to him "b/c he needed it more" (their words). They admit it, and then wonder why we don't see them more. This is nothing new, status quo for the past 20 years.
I WOH FT and so does DH. I just dread the idea of losing the ONLY TWO DAYS I HAVE to relax, hang out with DD, and get a few things done around the house, to deal with either sidestepping that issue, or having it out with my parents about the issue (w/o DH there to back me up).
Also, DH has stated that he does not want us to spend the night there, even though felon-sib isn't there right now, b/c he doesn't want my parents to get used to it and then we have to be the bad guys later when he's back (put our feet down now, is his reasoning). Also, he sees the laissez-faire attitude toward DD and almost doesn't want them around her or in the house (drug paraphenalia).
"Please keep DD away from the oven while I remove our dinner" apparently means "sit on the couch with your wine while calling DD, DD repeatedly as she barrels toward the open oven and bubbling hot dish" as an example.
As you can tell, my parents and I do not have a close relationship AT ALL, and (this is bad of me, I know) I keep thinking "we're going to see them at Thanksgiving and that's enough for me."
WWYD? Stop complaining? Go down just for one (very long urgghhhh) day? I really don't want to cross DH on the spending-the-night thing, but don't feel like having the real conversation with my parents. I realize that there are larger issues here and believe me, I have barely touched on them. Thanks for anyone willing to read this whole essay and comment.