Anonymous wrote:Dh can barely remember my birthday. I would never expect him to remember my dead parents’ birthdays. That honestly sounds crazy to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I expect him to remember the death anniversary not the birthday. He doesn't acknowledge the anniversary which was in the past few years and it upsets me.
I totally disagree. It’s one thing for you to say oh the anniversary is coming up and he acknowledges that for you, but to expect him to remember the date on his own is pretty unrealistic. (I have a dead mother).
Anonymous wrote:No. I think that's asking a lot.
If you are wanting support and comfort on that date, I think it's best to be direct and let them know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes I do think they should remember and honor your parent's birthday. My FIL passed away over 10 years ago. On his birthday we usually have a meal he liked for dinner and also have one of his favorite sweets for dessert. We use the food as a catalyst to talk about him and tell stories to our kids. It is a way to keep his memory alive. My dad passed away this year and we plan to do the same.
OK, but not everyone grieves the same way. If you come to an agreement on something like this and he forgets, I can see being upset. But to have a silent, passive aggressive expectation for your spouse to remember your deceased parents birthday when they probably didn’t know their birthday offhand when alive is completely irrational.
Anonymous wrote:yes I do think they should remember and honor your parent's birthday. My FIL passed away over 10 years ago. On his birthday we usually have a meal he liked for dinner and also have one of his favorite sweets for dessert. We use the food as a catalyst to talk about him and tell stories to our kids. It is a way to keep his memory alive. My dad passed away this year and we plan to do the same.
Anonymous wrote:You would only notice this and be upset if something else is already wrong. If your spouse were otherwise perfect, you'd give them grace.
I mean that kindly. So figure out what is the real problem and focus on that. I am great with dates, but sometimes on the date I just don't think about the event, even though I remembered it in the days leading up to it.
Anonymous wrote:I expect him to remember the death anniversary not the birthday. He doesn't acknowledge the anniversary which was in the past few years and it upsets me.