Anonymous wrote:This is depressing. Seems like most adult relationships with parents here are one sided with the benefit going towards the "child". I am supposed to just listen and not speak in our conversations, pay 100% for everything if I want to see them, give financially towards all their adult milestones and be a free babysitter when they deem me worthy to watch their kids. Don't call too much or too little, don't visit too much or too little, don't try too hard to have a relationship with DIL/SIL because that makes you needy and be ok with them not reciprocating and never have any expectations of being called, visited, or acknowledged for being used to provide whatever they needed... This sounds like a miserable way to spend your later years after putting your children first for 20+ years of their life and they can't reciprocate even simple things.
Anonymous wrote:You don't parent anymore. You move to the friends stage. Do you try to parent or give unsolicited advice to your friends? No, so don't do it to your adult children. Of course you can still give advice and share stories with your kids, but only when asked and it's appropriate. You have to realize that you've raised wonderful children and it's their turn to make their own decisions. You only get 18 years to shape them.
It took one of our parents a bit longer to stop giving us patronizing advice and I will say that it was to that parents' detriment. That parent got less phone calls and it wasn't as interesting to talk to them because they just wanted to grill me on my investments, my job and any other decisions I was making.
How to convey your love? Listen to their stories about their travels or fun things they did on the weekend. Show interest in their friends or people they're dating. You have raised kids right when they still love you enough to willingly want to be your friend when they're grown.
Anonymous wrote:I get sad that my own child barely sees his grandparents (4x a year for an afternoon for the ones 2 hours away, 1x per year for the ones a plane ride away), but it is what it is and we’ve replaced the grandparent role with local friends and neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP, my parents are wonderful, loving Grandparents and babysat 1 night -- total the entire time my kids were growing up. I am not resentful. My kids love them, they are great people.
I don't relate. I think it's super selfish. Maybe they give a lot of money? Normally great people want to be helpful.
This. I had the same experience. My kids are teens and I never understood why grandparents are now surprised that grandkids don't contact them nor are close? I mean how can you if you spent minimal time with them when they were little. Then they try to play the victim and blame me why your kids are distant. I literally spent 14 years calling weekly on videocalls to develop some kind of relationship, my guess is if I had not done that, we'd not have even heard from them except at holidays! My parents somehow thought I'll be calling them forever, without noticing that grandkids had grown up meanwhile. Well, guess what, grandma, grandson is 15 and has his own phone! My neighbors know my kids more than grandparents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP, my parents are wonderful, loving Grandparents and babysat 1 night -- total the entire time my kids were growing up. I am not resentful. My kids love them, they are great people.
I don't relate. I think it's super selfish. Maybe they give a lot of money? Normally great people want to be helpful.
Anonymous wrote:PP, my parents are wonderful, loving Grandparents and babysat 1 night -- total the entire time my kids were growing up. I am not resentful. My kids love them, they are great people.
Anonymous wrote:If they are financially independent, you respect them as peers. You treat them as peers. You strive for a relationship of equals.
How do you make someone love you? You can't. All parties remain in each other's lives and care/love each other by choice.
Feeling attachment and love is what's ordinary. I would expect, that it's only in the most outliner/uniquely evil scenarios that love doesn't exist into adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:You've gone from team captain, to coach, to cheerleader.
Captain = essential, actually on the field (when your kids are young)
Coach = calling plays but allowing independence (when your kids are older but not adults)
Cheerleader = you watch them run the game and you're on morale support. You might get to come on the field at half time or for some ceremonies (when your kids are independeent adults)