Anonymous wrote:I'm not white but most estrangement among some minorities happens because of money and Inheritance. Family members get greedy and want all of the house after grandma or whoever died to themselves. After that there's no trust and more anger and lawyers and bad feeling between our relatives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people? Very common. No one wants to inconvenience themselves. And when you are socializing there is a lot of inconvenienceing yourself.
Imagine how hard it is when you are hosting a dinner. All the work that goes in it.
I think you should create a WhatsApp group or something and then try and get a reunion going. Maybe you will get some interest. Even if 2 families want to get together, you should do it.
Anyone who moves more than a hour from their childhood home for work or school or a spouse has to is to manage.
We don’t all live 5-20 minutes from Ma, Grandma and Great Gma. Or in the same multigenerational home for decades. Maybe in Texas? Keep passing the house down and never leave the state or city?
I’m a native and I have met so many others that also grew up in DC or Arlington/Alexandria, MoCO. A lot of us left for a bit but came back to DC area for work. My kids have several generations of Dc families at their school. So many alumni have kids attending, and grandparents are often at events.
I get for those that grew up in small towns or areas of the country with no jobs—but Dc area has lots of tech, biotech, govt, etc. Huge job market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people? Very common. No one wants to inconvenience themselves. And when you are socializing there is a lot of inconvenienceing yourself.
Imagine how hard it is when you are hosting a dinner. All the work that goes in it.
I think you should create a WhatsApp group or something and then try and get a reunion going. Maybe you will get some interest. Even if 2 families want to get together, you should do it.
Yeah because Black families are highly intact.
Black people and other minorities are far more likely to have multigenerational households.
White people’s definition of intact family are different from minorities.
White people think an intact family = married mom and dad with maybe children. That’s it.
Intact families are subjective to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say it isn't common at all (white person). I know all my cousins, all my first cousins once removed, and a lot of second cousins. And see them regularly.
Hold up. Estranged doesn’t mean doesn’t get together in the regular.
Estranged means there was a falling out or deliberate boundary set and there will be no getting together. Totally different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people? Very common. No one wants to inconvenience themselves. And when you are socializing there is a lot of inconvenienceing yourself.
Imagine how hard it is when you are hosting a dinner. All the work that goes in it.
I think you should create a WhatsApp group or something and then try and get a reunion going. Maybe you will get some interest. Even if 2 families want to get together, you should do it.
Yeah because Black families are highly intact.
Anonymous wrote:White people? Very common. No one wants to inconvenience themselves. And when you are socializing there is a lot of inconvenienceing yourself.
Imagine how hard it is when you are hosting a dinner. All the work that goes in it.
I think you should create a WhatsApp group or something and then try and get a reunion going. Maybe you will get some interest. Even if 2 families want to get together, you should do it.
Anonymous wrote:I’m wondering how common it is to see large families that are completely estranged to very distant from each other. My husband has 3 siblings. None of them have seen or spoken to one another in five plus years. Apparently there was no falling out just not interested in each other/too busy in their own lives. They speak to their parents a few times a year but none of them have seen their parents in years even though they live an hour away. Multiple children/grandchildren have never seen their aunts/uncles and the grandparents have only ever seen 2 of the 8 grand children exactly once. One when was was 2 and another time when one child was already 5. The grandparents are not interested in seeing any of the grandkids and don’t want to be bothered with them. I was also told that the extended family is the same way and nobody really speaks to anybody. How common is this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people? Very common. No one wants to inconvenience themselves. And when you are socializing there is a lot of inconvenienceing yourself.
Imagine how hard it is when you are hosting a dinner. All the work that goes in it.
I think you should create a WhatsApp group or something and then try and get a reunion going. Maybe you will get some interest. Even if 2 families want to get together, you should do it.
Anyone who moves more than a hour from their childhood home for work or school or a spouse has to is to manage.
We don’t all live 5-20 minutes from Ma, Grandma and Great Gma. Or in the same multigenerational home for decades. Maybe in Texas? Keep passing the house down and never leave the state or city?
I’m a native and I have met so many others that also grew up in DC or Arlington/Alexandria, MoCO. A lot of us left for a bit but came back to DC area for work. My kids have several generations of Dc families at their school. So many alumni have kids attending, and grandparents are often at events.
I get for those that grew up in small towns or areas of the country with no jobs—but Dc area has lots of tech, biotech, govt, etc. Huge job market.
Bfd.
People from any state or city could say the same. They returned to their hometown on purpose: they picked a regional grad school there on purpose. They moved to where one or both sets of grandparents are.
Some people move. Some people never move. Others are in the middle. Tomato tomahto.
Read the thread. It was in response to only people in Texas stay near family (this was pointing out that’s ridiculous):
“We don’t all live 5-20 minutes from Ma, Grandma and Great Gma. Or in the same multigenerational home for decades. Maybe in Texas? Keep passing the house down and never leave the state or city?”
Anonymous wrote:My family of 9 is estranged from each other. I am hoping that once my 96 year old mother dies good things will happen. She orchestrates this dysfunction by extreme lying, manipulation. There is definitely systemic mental illness. Only the good die young and she will live forever. It’s very very sad.
Back in the day Catholics could not get birth control. Women who were not mentally stable had many children and this resulted in a generation (baby boomers) of much abuse.