Anonymous wrote:Maybe I'm nuts, but I disagree with my husband making our 16-year-old daughter attend our niece's 5th bday party. There will mainly be a bunch of 5-year-olds or younger, and our other niece who is 8, along with my in-laws and some of their adult friends. She is miserable about it and I don't blame her. He thinks she should go because it's family. I will be at our other daughter's sporting event (which makes me angry he's choosing the bday party over our daughter's sporting event to begin with). thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The party is at my sister-in-law's house.
She's also miserable because she ends up babysitting a bunch of younger kids. Our other niece who is a teenager will not be there. We see them often so it's not like a rare occasion or anything.
This is 10:40 again. If it's at the house, she should go, BUT she should not be expected to act as a babysitter. She should be able to act as any of the adult guests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks all - very good points made here.
She just told me she wants to compromise by going to the party if she can go to her "friend" that's a boy's house tonight. Which I'm also not comfortable with as I don't know him or his family at all.. ah the saga continues. [/quote
If you had just sided with your husband from the beginning you wouldn’t need to make compromises that involve potential for sexual activity.
She had no clue how I felt about her going to the party. We don't take sides in front of our kids.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all - very good points made here.
She just told me she wants to compromise by going to the party if she can go to her "friend" that's a boy's house tonight. Which I'm also not comfortable with as I don't know him or his family at all.. ah the saga continues. [/quote
If you had just sided with your husband from the beginning you wouldn’t need to make compromises that involve potential for sexual activity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The party is at my sister-in-law's house.
She's also miserable because she ends up babysitting a bunch of younger kids. Our other niece who is a teenager will not be there. We see them often so it's not like a rare occasion or anything.
She’s 16
Your husband wants to look good by offering his daughter as free labor and pretending that he’s raised such a family oriented kid that this is no big deal.
She does all the work and he gets all the credit.
It’s past time you stand up for your kid. If he makes her go, tell her to not do anything extra. She’s a guest. She’s not a babysitter. And she especially shouldn’t be doing more work than your husband. Tell her to take a page out of every lazy dad’s playbook and “go to the bathroom” whenever there’s a demand for kid wrangling. Stay there for at least 30 minutes (or if there’s only one bathroom just stand outside the door and take her time coming back.) Also give her permission to take a “call” from you if she feels stuck, so she has an excuse to step outside and use the phone in private.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think you are nuts. I think the expectations for this type of thing vary by family and circumstances.
It's sounds like your DH's family is like mine. We all get together for every birthday if we possibly can. My teens will always go to a party at their cousins' house. (They are similarly much older than all their cousins, who are preschool to early elementary.) However, my family doesn't expect them to go to the party the cousins host for their school friends (like the PP mentioned at a place like Pump it Up). We do the family get together and the little kid party separately.
If it is at their house, I think you taking one child to the sporting event and your DH taking your 16 year old to the party is a good compromise. If the party is at some little-kid place, I think you could let the 16 year old skip it and your husband can go represent your family.
Anonymous wrote:The party is at my sister-in-law's house.
She's also miserable because she ends up babysitting a bunch of younger kids. Our other niece who is a teenager will not be there. We see them often so it's not like a rare occasion or anything.