Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Go away troll. I have a WASP friend whose mother lives with them on a floor of their house and they get along very well. It's particularly great for the grandchild who is receiving excellent care from a loving family member.
I must have hit a nerve. Your WASP friend is irrelevant. OP is from a traditional culture and merging households with an American MIL will be a nightmare. Come back and let us know how it works out, OP.
NP - We're plain ol' American white folk, and it worked out just fine. We put an addition on the house, Grandma moved in, and everything worked out just fine. We're ten years in to the arrangement. Sorry that you had such a horrible experience, but that's on you, not all of America.
Do they not teach reading comprehension over in plain old America? PP is highlighting a culture clash among in-laws.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Go away troll. I have a WASP friend whose mother lives with them on a floor of their house and they get along very well. It's particularly great for the grandchild who is receiving excellent care from a loving family member.
I must have hit a nerve. Your WASP friend is irrelevant. OP is from a traditional culture and merging households with an American MIL will be a nightmare. Come back and let us know how it works out, OP.
NP - We're plain ol' American white folk, and it worked out just fine. We put an addition on the house, Grandma moved in, and everything worked out just fine. We're ten years in to the arrangement. Sorry that you had such a horrible experience, but that's on you, not all of America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Go away troll. I have a WASP friend whose mother lives with them on a floor of their house and they get along very well. It's particularly great for the grandchild who is receiving excellent care from a loving family member.
I must have hit a nerve. Your WASP friend is irrelevant. OP is from a traditional culture and merging households with an American MIL will be a nightmare. Come back and let us know how it works out, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Go away troll. I have a WASP friend whose mother lives with them on a floor of their house and they get along very well. It's particularly great for the grandchild who is receiving excellent care from a loving family member.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.
This the kind of mistake you will look back on with tears in your eyes. Americans don't know how to behave themselves and contribute to a family the way people from traditional cultures do. This kind of arrangement will not work with an American MIL. She will move in and be ungrateful.
Anonymous wrote:Considering this for MIL, age 70. She is healthy now but lives in an isolated cold-weather area and DHs only sibling is very unstable. She is not wealthy enough to live on her own here We have two children who love her and could benefit from her care (ages 4 and 6) after school. This is my idea, not DHs. Is it crazy to consider? I come from a culture where this is not uncommon.