Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you actually see any excluding behavior by the mom?
Sounds partly like being 12. 12 is hard. Being ESSENTIALLY an only child until 12 is even harder.
If you have a good relationship with the mom, mention that you are willing to baby sit the newborn for an afternoon if they want any solo mother-daughter bonding time.
No I haven't witnessed it. I'm taking her word for it. But you're, it could come from being her mom's only child for 12 years.
I think the point is that she is feeling left out, and that's how you should raise the issue. It could be moody 12 year old acts like she doesn't want mom around, but then when mom is busy with the baby she feels slighted. Or she could be reading the situation correctly-I had a friend growing up whose mom was so not interested in her any more when she had a new mom and a new baby-it was very sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you actually see any excluding behavior by the mom?
Sounds partly like being 12. 12 is hard. Being ESSENTIALLY an only child until 12 is even harder.
If you have a good relationship with the mom, mention that you are willing to baby sit the newborn for an afternoon if they want any solo mother-daughter bonding time.
No I haven't witnessed it. I'm taking her word for it. But you're, it could come from being her mom's only child for 12 years.
Anonymous wrote:Have you actually see any excluding behavior by the mom?
Sounds partly like being 12. 12 is hard. Being ESSENTIALLY an only child until 12 is even harder.
If you have a good relationship with the mom, mention that you are willing to baby sit the newborn for an afternoon if they want any solo mother-daughter bonding time.
Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. I don't have any advice other than to say your niece is very lucky to have you as an aunt. If her mother were your sister, then I would encourage you to have a chat with her but it is a little awkward with her being your ex-sister-in-law.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your brother.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a close relationship with any of the adults in this situation? If you are close to your ex-SIL, I would talk to her. If you aren't, but are close to your brother (and he has at least an okay relationship with his ex), I'd bring it up with him. If you aren't close to either of them, that's tough. Maybe talk to your brother generally about how kids feel when families blend and reblend. And be there for your niece. I don't think it's overstepping to tell her that she is always part of your family and welcome in your home.