Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
At one point you'll tell them both to their face that since your mother still spends the bulk of her time with your sister, she will also be looked after by said sister in her old age.
And follow through.
The mom would clearly prefer that so it's not the flex you think it is.
It's not a flex, how weird you should think that. It's a recognition of consequences for everyone. The mother probably prefers it, the sister might not (too bad for her, she appears to be selfishly monopolizing her mother right now), and OP can prepare herself right now to refuse shame and guilt when the time comes for her to avoid caring for her mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Have a conversation with your mother on this or simply accept the dynamics for what it is.
Definitely not up for forcing anyone to spend any time with me/family..
Good luck.
I wish it was easy to "simply accept" it and not feel at all emotional about it. I have accepted it in that I don't fight it but haven't accepted it in terms of no longer caring about it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you're coming across as very competitive and score keeping. You don't want to spend time with your mom. You want to "win" more time from your sister.
Your mom probably doesn't enjoy visiting you because of this competitive personality you have so she doesn't.
You have poor reading comprehension and shouldn’t bother responding with your nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:
I would just call her out on it point blank. Seeing her reactions and explanations might tell you a lot about why she does this.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you're coming across as very competitive and score keeping. You don't want to spend time with your mom. You want to "win" more time from your sister.
Your mom probably doesn't enjoy visiting you because of this competitive personality you have so she doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
At one point you'll tell them both to their face that since your mother still spends the bulk of her time with your sister, she will also be looked after by said sister in her old age.
And follow through.
The mom would clearly prefer that so it's not the flex you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:
At one point you'll tell them both to their face that since your mother still spends the bulk of her time with your sister, she will also be looked after by said sister in her old age.
And follow through.
Anonymous wrote:
At one point you'll tell them both to their face that since your mother still spends the bulk of her time with your sister, she will also be looked after by said sister in her old age.
And follow through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you have a great group of friends. It’s time to focus more on your family and friends and not worry so much about your parents and extended family.
Do you actually want to spend more than a week in the summer with your parents?
Is your sister divorced? Are you? It sounds like there is more to this dynamic.
If it was me, I’d really drop the rope with them. They just aren’t that in to you and your kids. And that’s ok. Focus on the people who are.
Neither of us are divorced, we strangely both have husbands with pretty significant mental health issues (that don't hugely impact visits and do in roughly the same way) - which is probably part of the dynamic now that i think about it. Neither of us get the adult support or partnership you typically would from a spouse, both our marriages are very one sided support so maybe we each look for that mutually supportive adult relationship more with our mom than typical. I don't turn to her with my problems (she's never been great with emotional stuff and I worry of creating a negative/downer tone to our interactions) but could overweight wanting to feel important and like a priority to her b/c my husband is incapable of prioritizing anything beyond his own needs
Historically no I didn't want more than a week with them but I am really acutely feeling the clock ticking down on their good time so do want to make the most of it. I have a flexible and remote job some more time with them doesn't come at a cost of other trips (they also live in a great summer spot and are fun when they visit us so a week with them doesn't feel like a drag)