Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? My husband and I both come from large families and none of their aunts or uncles has ever written to them at camp. My aunts and uncles never wrote me at camp. I don't think this is an expectation in most families.
Let me break this down for you. Just because it didn't or doesn't happen in YOUR families doesn't mean it isn't an "expectation in most families." And even if it ISN'T an "expectation in most families," that doesn't matter either. What matters is that in THIS family a family member has asked for this.
Are you saying that if someone in your or your husband's families asked you to write a letter to a 7 year old niece at camp, you'd refuse to do it on principle because it isn't "an expectation in most families?"
Yes, I am saying I would not do it. I don't have the bandwidth for this and don't expect other people in my family to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? My husband and I both come from large families and none of their aunts or uncles has ever written to them at camp. My aunts and uncles never wrote me at camp. I don't think this is an expectation in most families.
Let me break this down for you. Just because it didn't or doesn't happen in YOUR families doesn't mean it isn't an "expectation in most families." And even if it ISN'T an "expectation in most families," that doesn't matter either. What matters is that in THIS family a family member has asked for this.
Are you saying that if someone in your or your husband's families asked you to write a letter to a 7 year old niece at camp, you'd refuse to do it on principle because it isn't "an expectation in most families?"
Yes, I am saying I would not do it. I don't have the bandwidth for this and don't expect other people in my family to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? My husband and I both come from large families and none of their aunts or uncles has ever written to them at camp. My aunts and uncles never wrote me at camp. I don't think this is an expectation in most families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? My husband and I both come from large families and none of their aunts or uncles has ever written to them at camp. My aunts and uncles never wrote me at camp. I don't think this is an expectation in most families.
Let me break this down for you. Just because it didn't or doesn't happen in YOUR families doesn't mean it isn't an "expectation in most families." And even if it ISN'T an "expectation in most families," that doesn't matter either. What matters is that in THIS family a family member has asked for this.
Are you saying that if someone in your or your husband's families asked you to write a letter to a 7 year old niece at camp, you'd refuse to do it on principle because it isn't "an expectation in most families?"
Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? My husband and I both come from large families and none of their aunts or uncles has ever written to them at camp. My aunts and uncles never wrote me at camp. I don't think this is an expectation in most families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. My SIL dropped the rope and now my kids never get presents or cards for birthdays and Christmas from my brother and his family. You too can drop the rope, just so long as you're fine not having relationships with your nieces and nephews.
Your brother is pretty awful. Nature, nurture or both? Good for his wife for not trying to “fix” his relationships with his family: that’s his choice.
FWIW, it means she is also choosing not to have a good relationship with the kids who call her "aunt." They're not as hung up on the fact that she is their aunt "by marriage." In their minds, she's just their aunt, and in that family, neither the uncle nor the aunt seem to care to get to know the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. My SIL dropped the rope and now my kids never get presents or cards for birthdays and Christmas from my brother and his family. You too can drop the rope, just so long as you're fine not having relationships with your nieces and nephews.
Your brother is pretty awful. Nature, nurture or both? Good for his wife for not trying to “fix” his relationships with his family: that’s his choice.
FWIW, it means she is also choosing not to have a good relationship with the kids who call her "aunt." They're not as hung up on the fact that she is their aunt "by marriage." In their minds, she's just their aunt, and in that family, neither the uncle nor the aunt seem to care to get to know the kids.