Anonymous wrote:Just be very sure you won't have any regrets in 5 years. I went to college 1500 miles away (not India, but a bit of a schlep anyway) and wanted my parents to come to a special, unique performance I had the leading role in towards the end of freshman year. They did not feel like spending the money, the time, or the inconvenience of flying in for just a weekend to see it. I had a 16-year-old brother at home at the time who was a bit of a troublemaker so they would have had to bring him along or find someone to leave him with. In short, there were about 10 very good, logical reasons for them not to come. I totally understood, and accepted that this was part of the downside of going to college 1500 miles away.
However, the performance wound up being fantastic, there was no recording available, and it ended up being the last time I ever did something like that. My parents still bitterly regret their decision years later, but there's no going back. Just be very sure you aren't going to look back on this in a decade and wish you'd gone.
Anonymous wrote:Op- I've been to India. I love it. But it's absolutely not for everyone. Especially for someone with travel anxiety. In fact, it's the worst place on the planet for you. You will be uncomfortable, have to watch what you eat and drink, and be super vigilant of our surroundings. Your young adult daughter will be loving the fa t she's completely out of her comfort zone. I also think she is being incredibly selfish asking this of you. Please ignore other posters that say you should go- clearly they have never been to India, and don't understand your anxiety. It's not as though you will never see your daughter again, she's only gone for a year. And I highly doubt she would ever settle down there.
Anonymous wrote:"I just want to gently coast into the finish line. "
- this line stayed with me all day and my heart breaks for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this breaks my heart for your daughter. My parents don't know their grand kids at all because they too are don't traveling. My sister had three of her four children while living in New Zealand and my parents saw them twice in 6 years--when they came back to the US briefly. It has been seven years since they returned and my parents have seen them twice in that time. I have almost two year old twins--my mom saw them for a week when my dd had her first surgery and hasn't seen them since. My father has never met them. I live an easy flight away--as does my sister. Meanwhile, they know my DH'S family even though they live in CA and Oregon. They come and visit us. It is hard for us to travel to see them because my DD's medical issues. My sister has four kids and plane tickets for 6 is prohibitive. You should think about it now what kind of relationship you have with your adult children. They won't always be able to visit you and they will want to share their lives with you. I do have friends whose parents wash their hands of them once they are adults--wont see them, talk to them and happy to finally have their lives back. Think twice about this.
Perhaps adult children should consider how involved they'd like their parents to be with them and their children before they decide to move thousands of miles away.
It's something SH and I considered fully when we decided to move away and one of the reasons we moved back.
Not every parent lives in an area where "adult children" can grow a career beyond waiting tables at Denny's.
More DCUM closed mindedness. Your sister didn't move to New Zealand because she couldn't have a career in the states she moved because she wanted to be posh and tell everyone she was living on the other side of the world the same is true for you. You do didn't need two cars and 6 figure incomes you wanted it and you wanted to brag to your flyover friends you had made it in the city. Spare me the dramatics
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I just want to gently coast into the finish line. "
- this line stayed with me all day and my heart breaks for you.
Is this THAT big of a deal? I can see feeling that way at 60. Truthfully I kind of feel that way at 36. All the "exciting" stuff is over - school; starting a career; moving around etc. Now it's just the same slog for 30 yrs . . . if I feel like this at 36, I can't imagine NOT feeling like that at 60. Is this really SO unusual?
I'm 53. I don't feel like I did at 36, and many things are winding down, but other things are replacing them. But no, I don't want to gently coast to the finish line. I want to keep doing well what I do at work until I retire. I've got decades left. Coast for decades? NO WAY!