Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, too, remember that you are her child, and she may feel powerless to "make things better" for you?
+100 she means well.
Of course she means well. But it's such a trite thing to say. Remember, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
I like pps' suggestion, acknowledge her anxiety and try to see it as a reflection of that instead an indictment on your parenting.
I'm sorry OP. My mom does this to me all the time and I don't always react well. This is a good reminder to me as well.
+1 I'm sure she does mean well, but that doesn't obligate OP to be silent and take it. She can say, "I know that you want what's best for DS. Parenting a SN child is difficult, and we are working with teachers/doctors/therapists to best address his needs. Please just be there to love and support DS as his grandma, and if I need advice, I will ask."
NP here. OP, while you don't have to "take it," and yes, you should say what the PP advises here, please also couple that with giving your mom something concrete and very specific to DO for you and your child. Figure out something you can present to her as, "You know, I realize you want to help -- Would you be willing to...." then give her a task so she can feel she actually is accomplishing something that you want and need accomplished. Figure it out before you talk to her and don't wing it. If she's really into getting online, maybe ask her to research something for you (yes, you are perfectly able to do it yourself, but this is about finding her some task, not about telling her you can handle everything yourself). Or if your child likes and responds well to certain things (type of toy, type of audiobook to listen to at night, whatever, I don't know) then set her the task of finding those with a limit on how many you want (so she doesn't inundate you). And be willing to teach her about your child's needs. I don't know how far away she lives but I'd bet that places like INOVA might have grandparent classes on special needs children. If they don't, your child's doctors might be able to recommend some.
In other words -- she does want to help; she doesn't know first-hand about your child's needs or the way parents handle to hose needs today; and there is zero reason to let this turn into a problem. She is anxious at least in part out of love, and love gets frustrated when it cannot help. Make her an ally in any way she can actually help you, even if you have to fudge a little to find something for her to do. Someone's going to come along and post, "You shouldn't have to do that! Tell her off and tell her to stop! That's coddling her and you're too busy!" etc. But there just is no need to treat her that way. She did not mean to diss your parenting; she just is at a loss, out of love. If she's not toxic or problematic in other ways, please don't let this one e-mail eat at you. And she could prove a great ally over time as your child gets older, if you are willing to involve her however is appropriate.