Anonymous wrote:Please don't let your daughter visit them alone again, no matter what they say.
This, this, this, +1,000
And an added: Do not let her visit them in their home again, ever.
Is it possible to meet them at someplace between where you live and where they live for a half-day of lunch plus an activity (local park, museum in that area, whatever) and then you and daughter come home after that? Having an activity means everyone focuses on the activity and not on each other or on discussing whether stepmom has been to AA this week. It lets daughter build a few nice memories of fun days out with granddad and stepmom but does not put her into their care. Your dad may be fine with your daughter and love to see her, and may seem responsible with her in his home, but his real focus is always going to be on his wife's drinking and not on your daughter, frankly.
Neither you nor she should spend the night with them or have them spend the night with you any more, period. If they live so far away that meeting them for meal plus activity on one day is not doable, then keep in touch but don't worry about visits. This is not about her growing up respecting her grandfather, or about your father dying without knowing his granddaughter. This is about not only her physical safety when in their care but even more it's about her emotional well-being and allowing her to be child while she still can.
Your daughter deserves a LOT of praise from you for having the incredible good sense and strength to refuse to get in a car with someone who had a bottle there. But at the same time, your daughter at her age shouldn't
have to deal with such adult issues in the name of keeping in touch with grandpa. Please never put her in that position again, no matter how much your dad asks to see her. Letting her be in their care for a week at a time, even for one night, would be forcing her somewhat into the role of responsible adult, in a way -- she must be on tenterhooks when she's stayed with them. I think you see that now. That's what I mean about her emotional well-being-- she needs to
not grow up with memories of being sent every summer to a week of stress and worry that she will find another bottle, or that she'll be badgered to get into a car with someone she fears will kill them both driving drunk. You are smart to remove that fear by ending all trips. Please stick to that decision.
She's old enough that you can tell your dad she has things going on all summer now -- camps, classes, whatever. And it'll be true, even if what's going on is that she's spending time with her friends. Don't cave in if he guilts you over this. I really hope the "meet in the middle" thing can work for you, even if that means staying one night in a hotel somewhere.