Anonymous wrote:One of the mistakes that many posters make is assuming that granny doesn’t get it that a teenager wants to do their own thing. She gets it, she just doesn’t care about his wants, needs or development more than what she wants. She ‘s taken a position that she’s entitled as the elder to always trump his needs so how dare he say no!
OP should talk to her son about not letting someone else try to manipulate or guilt them into doing something they don’t want to do and that people who do this are coming from a place of selfishness not love.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't she just join for a family dinner every other week or so? Show up to his sports practices or shows or whatever extracurriculars he has? One on one time just isn't going to happen as much.
+1
I grew up being very close to my grandparents, sleeping over their house, vacationing with them, etc. Once we hit teen years my grandparents would come over for dinner, come to sports games to watch us play, etc. They found ways to see us and spend time with us on our schedules. It was honestly amazing. But I wasn’t going to lunch with my grandma once a week as a 15 year old. That’s unrealistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grandma needs to get told that if she keeps complaining about this, he'll switch to wanting to spend NO time with her at all.
Who treats people like that? That’s just plain cruelty.
I like someone’s idea of having grandma coming over to their house. I’m sure she’s lonely and he has more of a social life.
How far is her house? If it’s close maybe a weekly breakfast or lunch or dinner, whatever works for his schedule . It’s a tough transition when the grandkids are too busy.
It is not cruel to tell someone to stop being emotionally manipulative! It’s not cruel to explain that continuing to do this will make others avoid being a situation where you can subject them to this.
Boomers need to realize that you can’t treat people like crap just because you are a boomer. Not recognizing that a teenager isn’t going to want to spend every weekend at grannies and then being a jerk about it to the kid s just really selfish, bad yet typical boomer behavior!
Anonymous wrote:And she’s not taking it well and I don’t know what to do.
WE, his parents, have a hard time connecting with him. We mourned a bit, then learned how to find small ways to connect, respect his space, and embrace the time he DOES want to spend with us. It’s normal and we WANT him to launch, and this is step one.
DS used to spend nearly every weekend with his grandma in some capacity. She’d take him to museums, the zoo, movies, etc. It started dwindling around middle school, and now at 14, he has a little life of his own and we are happy with the time he chooses to share with us. But we ALL have to share that time. ILs are understanding about it. My mom, not at all.
The worst part is she guilt trips him. He does give her an afternoon about once a month, happily, to have lunch and to do something else with her. But she wants more. If he turns her down one week but says, let’s have lunch next week, she says, “That would be nice, but we don’t have to if you don’t want to.”
We’ve tried to tell her that it isn’t personal, that WE don’t see him much either. But it’s like she just doesn’t get it. If you’ve BT/DT, any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Can't she just join for a family dinner every other week or so? Show up to his sports practices or shows or whatever extracurriculars he has? One on one time just isn't going to happen as much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grandma needs to get told that if she keeps complaining about this, he'll switch to wanting to spend NO time with her at all.
Who treats people like that? That’s just plain cruelty.
I like someone’s idea of having grandma coming over to their house. I’m sure she’s lonely and he has more of a social life.
How far is her house? If it’s close maybe a weekly breakfast or lunch or dinner, whatever works for his schedule . It’s a tough transition when the grandkids are too busy.
Anonymous wrote:Grandma needs to get told that if she keeps complaining about this, he'll switch to wanting to spend NO time with her at all.
Anonymous wrote:One of the mistakes that many posters make is assuming that granny doesn’t get it that a teenager wants to do their own thing. She gets it, she just doesn’t care about his wants, needs or development more than what she wants. She ‘s taken a position that she’s entitled as the elder to always trump his needs so how dare he say no!
OP should talk to her son about not letting someone else try to manipulate or guilt them into doing something they don’t want to do and that people who do this are coming from a place of selfishness not love.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grandma needs to get told that if she keeps complaining about this, he'll switch to wanting to spend NO time with her at all.
That would not be helpful on any way whatsoever.
It might be if delivered gently. She was a mother to teens once too. Draw on your own experience, or that of a sibling, OP. Help your mom remember part of this is an age appropriate developmental task even though it sucks and hurts. (That said, it is developmentally appropriate for a teen to pull away from their family and lean in with friends, but that doesn't mean they should be given a universal hall pass and never expected to show up and spend time with their family. There is a balance.)
Anonymous wrote:“We don’t have to if you don’t want to” is not a guilt trip. At all.