Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In my family loving family means showing up when it's hard and showing up when it's happy. My kids will learn that we're the kind of people who show up. Ive yet to regret setting that example or living my life in that way.
Beautifully said.
Does it also mean being free to make your own decisions about you and your children, and not dictating or making demands of other peoples’ time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In my family loving family means showing up when it's hard and showing up when it's happy. My kids will learn that we're the kind of people who show up. Ive yet to regret setting that example or living my life in that way.
Beautifully said.
Anonymous wrote:I took my young kids to the funeral of a cousin of my spouse. My kids had never met the cousin but it was important to the family to be there. And, years later, it’s still important tht we were there. It was a major inconvenience - we had to travel five hours and get a hotel with a one year old and two other ES aged kids. But it wasn’t a hardship. I have always been glad that we were there to support our family.
Anonymous wrote:Funerals are for the living, not the deceased. You often go to support your loved ones when they are grieving a loss. Which isn't to say you have to go, but the fact you didn't know the cousin isn't the reason not to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not innapropriate to go or to ask you to go.
It's not innapropriate for you to send DH instead but MIL isn't doing anything wrong.
Children are frequently a happy light in a funeral. They dont understand enough to feel sad and generally make the old people happy. I would send your kids. Mine are 2 and 10 months. My 2 year old has been to 3 funerals (two of my grandparents and one uncle) and they were nothing but positive presences.
I would try to make it sound a bit less like you're making a decision to preserve your memorial day weekend fun though regardless of what it is. Someone is dead and MIL is grieving. No one cares or should care about your ruined bbq plans.
OP has a 5 year old. My almost 5 year old would absolutely understand that someone died and would be sad about it and probably anxious for a long time afterwards. My 3 year old would be sad too and cry when other people cried. It may be different when they’re just babies, but at 5 years old it’s inappropriate to expect them to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not innapropriate to go or to ask you to go.
It's not innapropriate for you to send DH instead but MIL isn't doing anything wrong.
Children are frequently a happy light in a funeral. They dont understand enough to feel sad and generally make the old people happy. I would send your kids. Mine are 2 and 10 months. My 2 year old has been to 3 funerals (two of my grandparents and one uncle) and they were nothing but positive presences.
I would try to make it sound a bit less like you're making a decision to preserve your memorial day weekend fun though regardless of what it is. Someone is dead and MIL is grieving. No one cares or should care about your ruined bbq plans.
I get what you're trying to say, but were I the MIL, I would totally care about whether I disturbed my DIL's plans and whether my DIL was close enough to *me* that I could request her presence to a funeral she didn't have to go to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not innapropriate to go or to ask you to go.
It's not innapropriate for you to send DH instead but MIL isn't doing anything wrong.
Children are frequently a happy light in a funeral. They dont understand enough to feel sad and generally make the old people happy. I would send your kids. Mine are 2 and 10 months. My 2 year old has been to 3 funerals (two of my grandparents and one uncle) and they were nothing but positive presences.
I would try to make it sound a bit less like you're making a decision to preserve your memorial day weekend fun though regardless of what it is. Someone is dead and MIL is grieving. No one cares or should care about your ruined bbq plans.
I get what you're trying to say, but were I the MIL, I would totally care about whether I disturbed my DIL's plans and whether my DIL was close enough to *me* that I could request her presence to a funeral she didn't have to go to.
Anonymous wrote:It's not innapropriate to go or to ask you to go.
It's not innapropriate for you to send DH instead but MIL isn't doing anything wrong.
Children are frequently a happy light in a funeral. They dont understand enough to feel sad and generally make the old people happy. I would send your kids. Mine are 2 and 10 months. My 2 year old has been to 3 funerals (two of my grandparents and one uncle) and they were nothing but positive presences.
I would try to make it sound a bit less like you're making a decision to preserve your memorial day weekend fun though regardless of what it is. Someone is dead and MIL is grieving. No one cares or should care about your ruined bbq plans.