Anonymous wrote:Tell her how you feel, not to guilt her into coming, but to clear the air. Things like this can fester over time and it does no one any good.
I'm betting after she became an empty nester she had to figure out her life and her volunteering has become important to her. Not that she doesn't love you, but you have your own life and family. And once things get back to normal for you, she's left to go back to her volunteer activities ( the people she bailed on ).
Anonymous wrote:OP here- thanks for the replies. I asked her a while ago and just talked to her again and she said, "I so wish I could be there!"- like she was SO concerned for me- and I wanted to say- you COULD- the volunteer thing is a writing group that SHE organizes and controls the schedule for. She is always talking about how busy she is- hosting dinners and company- and just doesn't have any time to visit but says she wants to see us more. I think it is her attitude that is bothering me- call a spade a spade- you COULD come but your social life is way more important to you. I know I should be glad that she even says she cares- and to the snarky poster- I am looking into hiring someone for the time I need help- I just wanted to believe that it is family you can count on- because you can be sure if someone in my family needed me and I was in her position I would drop everything and do what I could.
Anonymous wrote:How dare she not cancel on an existing commitment because you want her to?
Can you even hear how entitled you sound? Your kids are your responsibility. Help from family can be asked for when needed, and should always be appreciated (even if not at the "right" time), but is not owed to you.
I get that you are stressed and were hoping that your mom would alleviate that, but you have a military husband, so it's not like his absence during the early days of #3 is an unforeseeable event. You knew this was a possibility (I'm military myself), so you should have a) talked it through with your mom before it came up ("I feel confident that I can't handle 3 kids by myself until the baby is X months old. If DH has to leave before then, would you be able to make helping out a priority?"), and b) sought out multiple backup plans (neighborhood teen mother's helper, classmate who is willing to handle carpools, friends from church, wives of DH's shipmates/whatever group is available, other friends or relatives). You had exactly one plan "If DH has to leave, my mother will drop everything and help me for several weeks."
Your mom is no obligated to justify her priorities to you. She has a committment during that time. She is not being a bad mom; she is keeping her word to the people in her life.
Anonymous wrote:Your mom doesn't want to come help. These are your kids. She is not obligated to do anything. She had her time to raise children and now she wants to have some fun. If you couldn't manage three kids then you should have been using protection.
Anonymous wrote:Just let it go.
Did she describe what her volunteer obligation was? What if it is to help someone who is in a much more dire situation than you?
Then there are the moms who won't help anyway. My mom is one of those. I wouldn't dream of asking her to come in a situation like yours, because 1) she wouldn't want to come in the first place, and 2) if I said something, she'd come, but be resentful the entire time. I'm betting your mom isn't one of these types. Feel lucky that you have a mom that cares enough to come later, and find someone else to help in the time that she can't.