Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s interesting reading the two different opinions on this thread.
I never spent the night at my grandparents house. The whole thing sounds weird to me.
Why is a 70 something trying to fill their emotional wants with a 12 year old? It is so gross and manipulative.
Um emotional needs? Some of you are really effed up.
Are you trying to fill your creepy emotional needs when you want to spend time with your kids?
Or maybe it's because you grew up with no extended family.
But many of us did and have great memories of sleepovers with the grandparents. My grandma taught me how to cook and garden we watched the old movies and stayed up late. It was fun.
Anonymous wrote:It’s interesting reading the two different opinions on this thread.
I never spent the night at my grandparents house. The whole thing sounds weird to me.
Why is a 70 something trying to fill their emotional wants with a 12 year old? It is so gross and manipulative.
Anonymous wrote:DD12 wouldn’t spend the night anywhere but home until just this year when she started spending the night with her friends, and now they do sleepovers quite often, alternating houses. My mom inadvertently found out when DD let it slip, and now my mom has been chomping at the bit for DD to “finally” spend the night at her house. DD isn’t comfortable with that, for a variety of reasons but mainly that my mom isn’t the easiest person to spend lengths of time with. I keep making excuses but she keeps saying she’s “hurt” that DD will spend the night with friends but not her own grandma. I can’t do this for the next six years; something final needs to be said. How do you tell someone that their home isn’t a welcoming or comforting place and it’s likely DD will never want to spend the night there with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just send her for one night- life is full of things we don’t love. Best to learn that lesson young.
No. This is a good argument for spending time as a family with grandma during the day. NOT for a 1 on 1 sleepover with an adult the CHILD doesn't feel comfortable with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like a grown adult should understand "It’s different with friends her own age."
OP here. I definitely agree, but so far, that hasn’t satisfied her. Maybe there will be no satisfying her and I just need to accept that.