Anonymous wrote:Are these your parents or your in-laws?
If your parents, you need to tell them privately that they shouldn’t contradict you. And if they do, you immediately call them out.
“No, Nana,we talked about this. Larlo and I are going to the park. You don’t need to go with us and can stay home. Larlo, shoes on now, please.”
“No, Nana, we talked about this. Larlo, Nana is funny. She sometimes thinks *she* is your mom. It’s time to put your plate away.”
If these are your in-laws, your spouse needs to have these conversations.
Anonymous wrote:Grandparents were in over the weekend, and they contradict me and DS frequently in front of the kids.
Not necessarily over big issues, but over every issue.
"Time to put on your shoes so we can leave"...toddler refuses..."Ok, he doesn't have to put on his shoes and we don't have to go anywhere"...toddler looks confused
You: no, shoes on and we are leaving.
Parent says "clean up your plate and put it in the sink"..."you don't need to do that, grandma's got it."
You: no, Larla needs to do it but thanks.
"You must practice your instrument"...groaning from kid..."that's ok, I don't need to hear him play"
You: no, it is time for them to practice.
Parent tells kid item is trash, not recycle. "Sure that is! It should go in the recycle" (item is a dirty napkin)
You: what? No, that’s trash.
"We are going to do X" (parent)..."wouldn't you rather they do Y" (grandparent)
You: we are doing X.
It is just constant, and it gets the kids out of their routines, which then messes everyone up.
I've asked parents not to contradict us in front of the kids, but they insist they are just helping and offering suggestions.
Mostly a rant, but any advice would be appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
They are my parents. Not In-laws.
Haha--they'd come without an invitation.
When I've tried to talk with them, I am accused of being too sensitive and not appreciative.
Then you need to grow a backbone. Until you believe you’re a real grown up, your parents won’t either.
Anonymous wrote:Are these your parents or your in-laws?
If your parents, you need to tell them privately that they shouldn’t contradict you. And if they do, you immediately call them out.
“No, Nana,we talked about this. Larlo and I are going to the park. You don’t need to go with us and can stay home. Larlo, shoes on now, please.”
“No, Nana, we talked about this. Larlo, Nana is funny. She sometimes thinks *she* is your mom. It’s time to put your plate away.”
If these are your in-laws, your spouse needs to have these conversations.
Anonymous wrote:Did they have rules/boundaries when they were your parents as a child? If so, ask where they have gone.
Anonymous wrote:Grandparents were in over the weekend, and they contradict me and DS frequently in front of the kids.
Not necessarily over big issues, but over every issue.
"Time to put on your shoes so we can leave"...toddler refuses..."Ok, he doesn't have to put on his shoes and we don't have to go anywhere"...toddler looks confused
”Put your shoes on, Pierpont. Mom, it’s time for you to leave.”
Parent says "clean up your plate and put it in the sink"..."you don't need to do that, grandma's got it."
”Put the plate in the sink, Larlo. And then get your grandmother’s coat because she’s leaving.”
"You must practice your instrument"...groaning from kid..."that's ok, I don't need to hear him play"
“Before you practice, come say goodbye to grandma. She’s leaving now.”
Parent tells kid item is trash, not recycle. "Sure that is! It should go in the recycle" (item is a dirty napkin)
”Here mom (handing her the napkin). Take it home with you and put it in your own recycling bin.”
"We are going to do X" (parent)..."wouldn't you rather they do Y" (grandparent)
”Looks like it’s time for you to go, Mom.”
It is just constant, and it gets the kids out of their routines, which then messes everyone up.
I've asked parents not to contradict us in front of the kids, but they insist they are just helping and offering suggestions.
Mostly a rant, but any advice would be appreciated.