Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use your voice and ask for help. Have you asked them? They’re not mind readers. Pick up the phone and ask them.
If they turn you down/ say no then they suck. But if you’re waiting for anyone to just magically sweep in to help you’ll end up disappointed, which you are now.
My husband has to travel for very long stretches of time overseas for work. My parents rarely helped, even if I asked/begged. So I started asking friends, and many of them said yes.
So ask. Just ask them.
We did. When DH just found out about his deployment being so long, he reached out to his parents. He asked for help. And they changed the subject and started talking to them about his sister. His sister who claims "oh I love my nephews", has not called them ONCE in their lifetime to wish them a Happy Birthday or a Merry Christma. Not ONCE. But hey, send me your postcards, make them cute and all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're your kids not theirs. They are living their best retired lives. I see nothing wrong with not helping out.
New PP here. Sure, don't help out. And don't expect your grown kids to take care of your crap when you are no longer independent.
Difference is the parents have already done raising and doing things for op. That is why you help out your parents because of the sacrifaces they made. ( assuming they were good enough parents)
Anonymous wrote:That is very annoying and not very sensitive of them. I learned something recently, though, when I expect people to act how I would in a similar situation, I often end up disappointed. They may not understand/grasp how hard it is for you. I think it’s OK to tell them things have been hard, but keep that a separate issue from the pictures.
My retired father is always sending pictures from where he is on vacation. It drives my siblings crazy. I think he’s just trying to share his life with us. But the issue is he doesn’t come visit the grandchildren, so it’s a hard pill for them to swallow when he’s on another vacation and won’t even come see them. That being said they haven’t asked him to, and they’re assuming he’s choosing a Caribbean island over them. He’s trying to keep in touch by sending pictures of where he is, because he’s not a good communicator otherwise. There’s an issue bc they’re not seeing it from the same perspective. I think if one of us sat him down and told him how what we thought he would feel just terrible! I really think the majority of family issues are from a realistic, expectation and unclear communication.
Anonymous wrote:No OP has started a new thread about family overseas. OP I see why your knows don’t want to be bothered you seem mentally ill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're your kids not theirs. They are living their best retired lives. I see nothing wrong with not helping out.
New PP here. Sure, don't help out. And don't expect your grown kids to take care of your crap when you are no longer independent.
Anonymous wrote:No OP has started a new thread about family overseas. OP I see why your knows don’t want to be bothered you seem mentally ill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell me I am in the wrong here.
DH is deployed. I work full time, I have 2 DCs, 5 yo and 2 yo. I have no nannies, no regular babysitters, I am doing all the drop offs and pickups. I am doing all the activities. I am IT when kids are sick. ILs are retired and live close to SIL, a SAHM with HS-aged DCs, in another state. I have not received one phone call "hey, how are you doing?", "hey, he is gone for a while now, can you use some help?"
Right after Christmas my youngest had COVID. Not a single text or phone call about how he was doing. NOTHING. Instead, I am bombarded with pictures of them lounging by the pool or on the ocean. Obviously no invite "hey, kids have spring break? Come visit us". But hey, I should send them annual pictures they can frame.
Should I confront them? I am fuming inside. I don't want to rile up DH but I am so sick of that.
My ILs are like this. There is no point to confront because they don’t care. You can’t shame them into being better people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're your kids not theirs. They are living their best retired lives. I see nothing wrong with not helping out.
New PP here. Sure, don't help out. And don't expect your grown kids to take care of your crap when you are no longer independent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Stone deaf"
LOL
I have to admit I was a bit like WTF on the title in more ways than one.
Yes I thought it was going to be about hearing impaired in-laws, not people who don't hop to it when called.