Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
Um...no. This is an invitation. It is to be accepted or declined. It's not a summons. Would it be nice if she came? Yes. But she is not obligated to if she doesn't want to, for ANY reason.
"I think DS feels"...well, what with being 18 and all, DS can get on the phone and talk to his grandma, with whom he is close, if he wants to.
You are warming up to really work yourself into a resentful place over this. Take a step back.
I didn't say it wasn't an invitation, I said *I* didn't do the inviting. Of course it's not a summons.
I clearly disagree that there is no obligation to attend important events in the life of your family. Am I really the only one that thinks there *are* familial obligations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get over it. Maybe she has another event that she'd rather attend. Such is life. Send her photos. He's upset, but he's an 18 year old.
You obviously either don't have kids, or they're still toddlers. THere is no advice in what you wrote, nor relevance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
Um...no. This is an invitation. It is to be accepted or declined. It's not a summons. Would it be nice if she came? Yes. But she is not obligated to if she doesn't want to, for ANY reason.
"I think DS feels"...well, what with being 18 and all, DS can get on the phone and talk to his grandma, with whom he is close, if he wants to.
You are warming up to really work yourself into a resentful place over this. Take a step back.
I didn't say it wasn't an invitation, I said *I* didn't do the inviting. Of course it's not a summons.
I clearly disagree that there is no obligation to attend important events in the life of your family. Am I really the only one that thinks there *are* familial obligations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
No. You'll just have to accept that not everything revolves around your child, OP. It's not reasonable to expect people to travel for a graduation.
His grandmother is a little different than expecting "people" to travel. From where? Iceland? Thirty miles away? Kind of matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
Um...no. This is an invitation. It is to be accepted or declined. It's not a summons. Would it be nice if she came? Yes. But she is not obligated to if she doesn't want to, for ANY reason.
"I think DS feels"...well, what with being 18 and all, DS can get on the phone and talk to his grandma, with whom he is close, if he wants to.
You are warming up to really work yourself into a resentful place over this. Take a step back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
No. You'll just have to accept that not everything revolves around your child, OP. It's not reasonable to expect people to travel for a graduation.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
Anonymous wrote:Get over it. Maybe she has another event that she'd rather attend. Such is life. Send her photos. He's upset, but he's an 18 year old.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I didn't write that I extended the invitation, or that this is my mother. Of course there is nothing else going on, otherwise I would have mentioned that as well.
I think DS feels it is important for her to be there. I'm not particularly concerned with graduations personally, as I managed to avoid both my undergrad and graduate school ones, but it's not about me. I think that's what irks me--it should be about DS, not about what we, the other adults, find convenient.
Anonymous wrote:You extended an invitation; invitations are not summons. She declined the invitation. You can get DS excited about looking forward to another visit in the late spring/early summer--ask her to start planning something with you now so you can share that with him.
The first thing you wrote about your mom is that she is very close to your son. Pause and be grateful for that.