Anonymous wrote:My parents moved near to me and it was a game changer. Move!
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you move out to be near your grandchild, OP? What are you doing that’s so important?
OP you forgot to answer this question in the very first reply to your post.
She answered further down:
“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.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, if you’d provided a “lower resource” upbringing, she’s probably be more likely to settle closer to home. Why would you give your kids the world if you didn’t want them to get out into it?
Interesting point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Marry well” is usually code for “doesn’t have to work” according to DCUM.
I don’t think the OP’s daughter does have to work. She chooses to work to “eke out a few more bucks.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing you are more unhappy about it than she is. If I was balancing career, marriage, and kids and my mom wanted to talk to me every day, often complaining about how far away I lived, that would stress me out too. She may be exaggerating to appease you since you seem obsessed with this. She also may be just stressed like most dual-earning households with young kids.
My parents moved close to me (actually moved to be close to my children, let’s be honest) and it’s more work and more stress for me. I still use after school care, baby sitters, camps, etc. but now I have to constantly manage my mother’s feeling and judgement about how I prioritize my time or live my life.
I don’t “often complain.” Their geography is the result of being status seeking workaholics who believe their specific job titles in a specific city at this point in time gives them [more] status and positions them for the next rung up the ladder they’re chasing. When in fact they could work anywhere and make the same great money near us or near his parents. Whatever the case, they’ve isolated themselves and our grandchild and it just all seems entirely pointless. The broader point for this forum is I know they’re not alone. This is the frequently reality of “marry well.” I’m sharing to peal back the alleged happy and high status patina of “marrying well.”
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, if you’d provided a “lower resource” upbringing, she’s probably be more likely to settle closer to home. Why would you give your kids the world if you didn’t want them to get out into it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you move out to be near your grandchild, OP? What are you doing that’s so important?
OP you forgot to answer this question in the very first reply to your post.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you move out to be near your grandchild, OP? What are you doing that’s so important?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing you are more unhappy about it than she is. If I was balancing career, marriage, and kids and my mom wanted to talk to me every day, often complaining about how far away I lived, that would stress me out too. She may be exaggerating to appease you since you seem obsessed with this. She also may be just stressed like most dual-earning households with young kids.
My parents moved close to me (actually moved to be close to my children, let’s be honest) and it’s more work and more stress for me. I still use after school care, baby sitters, camps, etc. but now I have to constantly manage my mother’s feeling and judgement about how I prioritize my time or live my life.
I don’t “often complain.” Their geography is the result of being status seeking workaholics who believe their specific job titles in a specific city at this point in time gives them [more] status and positions them for the next rung up the ladder they’re chasing. When in fact they could work anywhere and make the same great money near us or near his parents. Whatever the case, they’ve isolated themselves and our grandchild and it just all seems entirely pointless. The broader point for this forum is I know they’re not alone. This is the frequently reality of “marry well.” I’m sharing to peal back the alleged happy and high status patina of “marrying well.”