Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to do anything? Just have them sit on the couch. What's the problem?
Clearly you have never experienced the pain and boredom of this kind of situation. It is life sucking. DP.
OP here. Thank you. It’s a hard situation to describe and not one I can just ignore (recognizing that is also a “me” issue).
Mom especially just wants to be near me. I can’t make dinner without her staring at me and basically providing running commentary over the whole process. If I run upstairs, I’m peppered with questions about what I’m doing. Forget about a run to the grocery store. That’s a whole family outing, done very, very slowly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to do anything? Just have them sit on the couch. What's the problem?
Clearly you have never experienced the pain and boredom of this kind of situation. It is life sucking. DP.
OP here. Thank you. It’s a hard situation to describe and not one I can just ignore (recognizing that is also a “me” issue).
Mom especially just wants to be near me. I can’t make dinner without her staring at me and basically providing running commentary over the whole process. If I run upstairs, I’m peppered with questions about what I’m doing. Forget about a run to the grocery store. That’s a whole family outing, done very, very slowly.
And? Doesn't seem so outlandish, OP. Many of us have relatives that get on our nerves. Outings and activities don't solve anything. If it does for you, great, but for me, it's just more cat herding, more slowly, with possibly racist or inappropriate commentary always on the verge of spilling out. With games, it's full blast nonsense that ruins every game. The only thing I can do with them is watch movies.
This is why they don't often visit because when they do, whatever I organize or don't organize, it's bound to be irritating.
Nice word salad but you didn't offer any suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to do anything? Just have them sit on the couch. What's the problem?
Clearly you have never experienced the pain and boredom of this kind of situation. It is life sucking. DP.
OP here. Thank you. It’s a hard situation to describe and not one I can just ignore (recognizing that is also a “me” issue).
Mom especially just wants to be near me. I can’t make dinner without her staring at me and basically providing running commentary over the whole process. If I run upstairs, I’m peppered with questions about what I’m doing. Forget about a run to the grocery store. That’s a whole family outing, done very, very slowly.
And? Doesn't seem so outlandish, OP. Many of us have relatives that get on our nerves. Outings and activities don't solve anything. If it does for you, great, but for me, it's just more cat herding, more slowly, with possibly racist or inappropriate commentary always on the verge of spilling out. With games, it's full blast nonsense that ruins every game. The only thing I can do with them is watch movies.
This is why they don't often visit because when they do, whatever I organize or don't organize, it's bound to be irritating.
Anonymous wrote:My mom and brother are visiting (for too long) over Xmas. Need ideas to entertain them and keep my sanity. We are in Fairfax Cty and the two of them will literally sit on my couch and stare at me for 5 days if I don’t figure out what to do with them. And no, neither will offer up anything, entertain themselves, or even cook a meal or lift a finger while they are here. We have decades of family trauma and dysfunction to tip toe around, so I am just trying to get them out of the house once a day for some distraction.
About them:
—Mom is mid-70s. Fairly overweight which limits her mobility. Everything is a production and wants to know “the plan” multiple times a day. Lives in the South so cold weather is also a challenge for her.
—Brother is mid-50s. Single. An unflattering description would be that he’s the comic book store guy from The Simpsons.
I will also have two college-age/recent grad children at home.
Some ideas:
—Husband takes brother and my son to Caps or Wizards game
—I take mom and my daughter to a show. Not thrilled about going downtown with mom, but will for something of interest. May opt for Miracle on 34th St musical at Capital One Hall. Boycotting KC.
—They’ve done various Smithsonian stuff before, but don’t think either has done the Spy museum.
How do you keep family busy when visiting? I wish we could be a normal family, but we’re well past any chance of that happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to do anything? Just have them sit on the couch. What's the problem?
Clearly you have never experienced the pain and boredom of this kind of situation. It is life sucking. DP.
OP here. Thank you. It’s a hard situation to describe and not one I can just ignore (recognizing that is also a “me” issue).
Mom especially just wants to be near me. I can’t make dinner without her staring at me and basically providing running commentary over the whole process. If I run upstairs, I’m peppered with questions about what I’m doing. Forget about a run to the grocery store. That’s a whole family outing, done very, very slowly.