Anonymous wrote:You taught her this, she’s living what you expected and now you’re complaining.
You’re the problem, it’s you.
Anonymous wrote:OP I could be your daughter. I’m in DC in a high paying medical specialty and raising a daughter. I’m a single mom, to boot. I would give anything to have my parents nearby. I love them. But they will not, not ever, move here (too expensive, too stressful, which I understand). The only choice they’ve given me is for me to move back home with my daughter in tow to their Midwest city. I’ve considered it, but I’d have to leave my job, find another, pull DD out of school (now in 6th grade), etc. I want nothing more than to have more family in our lives. But it’s their way or the highway, and they’re both retired. They won’t talk about a condo here 1/2 of the year, or extended stays, etc. It’s…very one-sided.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I could be your daughter. I’m in DC in a high paying medical specialty and raising a daughter. I’m a single mom, to boot. I would give anything to have my parents nearby. I love them. But they will not, not ever, move here (too expensive, too stressful, which I understand). The only choice they’ve given me is for me to move back home with my daughter in tow to their Midwest city. I’ve considered it, but I’d have to leave my job, find another, pull DD out of school (now in 6th grade), etc. I want nothing more than to have more family in our lives. But it’s their way or the highway, and they’re both retired. They won’t talk about a condo here 1/2 of the year, or extended stays, etc. It’s…very one-sided.
Do you mind sharing what you're spending annually on child care in Washington for one tween child, as a successful single mother with no family or spouse to help?
Anonymous wrote:OP I could be your daughter. I’m in DC in a high paying medical specialty and raising a daughter. I’m a single mom, to boot. I would give anything to have my parents nearby. I love them. But they will not, not ever, move here (too expensive, too stressful, which I understand). The only choice they’ve given me is for me to move back home with my daughter in tow to their Midwest city. I’ve considered it, but I’d have to leave my job, find another, pull DD out of school (now in 6th grade), etc. I want nothing more than to have more family in our lives. But it’s their way or the highway, and they’re both retired. They won’t talk about a condo here 1/2 of the year, or extended stays, etc. It’s…very one-sided.
Anonymous wrote:OP I could be your daughter. I’m in DC in a high paying medical specialty and raising a daughter. I’m a single mom, to boot. I would give anything to have my parents nearby. I love them. But they will not, not ever, move here (too expensive, too stressful, which I understand). The only choice they’ve given me is for me to move back home with my daughter in tow to their Midwest city. I’ve considered it, but I’d have to leave my job, find another, pull DD out of school (now in 6th grade), etc. I want nothing more than to have more family in our lives. But it’s their way or the highway, and they’re both retired. They won’t talk about a condo here 1/2 of the year, or extended stays, etc. It’s…very one-sided.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You taught her this, she’s living what you expected and now you’re complaining.
You’re the problem, it’s you.
This. 100% this.
Parents have no control over a child after they leave for college at 17 or 18. I think it’s just the ethos of selective striver colleges and striver grad school programs and yuppy striver neighborhoods, plus a boost from social media. There is so much pressure to conform and become an excellent sheep, happiness be damned.
Women with ambition are “excellent sheep.” You are an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You taught her this, she’s living what you expected and now you’re complaining.
You’re the problem, it’s you.
This. 100% this.
Parents have no control over a child after they leave for college at 17 or 18. I think it’s just the ethos of selective striver colleges and striver grad school programs and yuppy striver neighborhoods, plus a boost from social media. There is so much pressure to conform and become an excellent sheep, happiness be damned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you saying you’d be happy to provide full time day care following all the parenting requirements your daughter and son in law have if they moved near you? You’d give only the foods they approve, take the kid to all the activities they want, follow their screen limits, toy rules, etc?
Are you kidding, of course I would happily provide any day care duties. Just as my parents and my husband’s parents were always nearby and there for me when our children were growing up. It’s not just day care or providing a helping hand, it’s proximity to be there and watch them grow up. It’s painful to be so far away and know strangers are raising a grandchild. I keep using “strangers” because that is what is happening. I am not anti day care, I am underscoring how un-well “marrying well” turned out to be.
Another user asked why don’t we move near them: Because they are fairly rootless workaholics and go where their careers take them. They will likely bounce around and job hop for the next 30 years.
No, they’re strangers to you.
The caregivers at our childrens’ daycare were not strangers to us at all. We knew and trusted them. It certainly wasn’t perfect, but we absolutely knew who was caring for our kids.
We can agree to disagree. And you can rationalize it however you’d like. It is paying large sums of money to lower class strangers to raise your child(ren) instead of you and/or grandparents, i.e. family, raising them. All so you could net more HHI and/or live far away from your parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You taught her this, she’s living what you expected and now you’re complaining.
You’re the problem, it’s you.
This. 100% this.
Parents have no control over a child after they leave for college at 17 or 18. I think it’s just the ethos of selective striver colleges and striver grad school programs and yuppy striver neighborhoods, plus a boost from social media. There is so much pressure to conform and become an excellent sheep, happiness be damned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You taught her this, she’s living what you expected and now you’re complaining.
You’re the problem, it’s you.
This. 100% this.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you so enmeshed with her? Why is she telling you about her sex life? Why are you still linking your happiness to your adult daughter?