Anonymous wrote:We used to go
Visit my grandmother and she had a drawer full of special snacks that were only for my cousins. We would ask if we could have a treat and she would say no. There wasn’t really much food in the house other than that. I remember my father taking some moldy cheese out of the fridge and scraping the mold off and giving us that for a treat. But he still made us visit her every single week. Don’t do that. We knew this women didn’t like us and wondered what we were doing there
Anonymous wrote:I'd tell her Grandma has her own issues and not to take anything that feels negative personally.
Anonymous wrote:Not exactly the same scenario but my mom was really horrible to me for years when I was growing up (emotional not physical stuff.)) She started becoming nicer to me after I got married and she liked my husband and wanted access to our family, but when she started making Critical comments about my toddler aged daughter I really set some very clear limits for myself on time with her. I simply was not going let my kid experience what I experienced growing up. I would advise you to do the same. At some point, it means having a conversation with your kid about your mom’s tendency to say mean things or whatever. It might make your kid like grandma less. Oh well. Grandma should have done better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I closely know someone with a story like yours op, and in her case she has a predetermined idea of what the relationship with grandma should look like. Both she and her husband foster that kind of thinking in their kids.
Are you white you’re not setting up yourself and your daughter to some expectations about what grandma should be like?
OP here. No, because I had pretty low expectations on my mom as a grandma (just because of how she was for me as a mom). I think some of the expectations from my DD are formed because she does see her being a good grandma to her cousin and sees a more typical relationship with her other grandma. I wouldn't say she's extremely close with her other grandma, but she does notice that her other grandma shows an interest in her. So I think it's kind of human nature to compare, especially when she can see my mom is capable of being a decent grandma to her other grandchild.
Anonymous wrote:I closely know someone with a story like yours op, and in her case she has a predetermined idea of what the relationship with grandma should look like. Both she and her husband foster that kind of thinking in their kids.
Are you white you’re not setting up yourself and your daughter to some expectations about what grandma should be like?
Anonymous wrote:Have you ever had a discussion with your mom about how she treats you or your DD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you lying to your daughter? You need to validate what appear to be, according to your description, perfectly accurate feelings. Trying to foster a relationship between your child and someone who doesn't really care about them is worse than a waste of time - it trains them to ignore their gut feeling. They'll need that gut feeling when they date, and when they try to strike up professional relationships.
Don't mess with your kid's radar.
+1