Anonymous wrote:This seems crazy to me that you are so bothered by this. Think of all your mother must have done for you in your life and you begrudge her this? Ugh, I feel sorry for her having a kid like you.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe she’s trying to show you off to her colleagues, or if this is the first job she’s had in a long time maybe she wants you to see her at work. Does your help mean she gets freed up to spend time with you sooner than she would otherwise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There s a big difference between helping out with personal tasks (which you absolutely should do for a parent) versus helping someone perform their job. Her employer is taking advantage of her and by extension, you, even if unintentionally.
OP here, this sums up how I feel. If she was asking us to go to the grocery store or Target to pick up a few things, it wouldn't be a problem. Similarly, if my Mom was running a restaurant that she started from the ground up, that would be different too. But she's working for a mid-sized university (one that a majority of people on this board have heard of), and while she's not at the top of the food chain in her department, she's not at the bottom either; it's frustrating that she can't stick her neck out, and try to get some college kid to help set up name tags, instead of using her kids who are in town for a short time for free labor, or ask a co-workers, "hey Donna, my kids are in town this weekend, can you help with the set up for the Baxter lecture instead?"
Anonymous wrote:There s a big difference between helping out with personal tasks (which you absolutely should do for a parent) versus helping someone perform their job. Her employer is taking advantage of her and by extension, you, even if unintentionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree heartily with pps. This isn't some honor bestowed upon you. It's taking advantage of you, your time and money coming to visit her.
Next time she asks "Mom, I really don't feel up to working your event for this visit. If you want to spend time together outside of work, let me know, otherwise I'm going to hang out with Aunt Mary and Cousin Joe. Call me when you're done and we can go for dinner."
I think I'd bring this up before she does, and I'd do it by asking her help in figuring it out. "Mom, we'd love to visit, but I think we need to do it as completely downtime. Would it be possible to come without helping at events like we usually do? Would that make it weird, or could we find a way to make it work?" Something like that.
I know some of DCUM hates "scripts," but that is something like what I'd try. Framing in advance makes it less likely to spark reactivity in the moment.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree heartily with pps. This isn't some honor bestowed upon you. It's taking advantage of you, your time and money coming to visit her.
Next time she asks "Mom, I really don't feel up to working your event for this visit. If you want to spend time together outside of work, let me know, otherwise I'm going to hang out with Aunt Mary and Cousin Joe. Call me when you're done and we can go for dinner."