Anonymous wrote:My DD, 22, is so freaking difficult. Everything I say she challenges, it’s like she thinks I am so stupid that I can’t possibly say anything that is correct. It’s so frustrating and no fun at all to spend time with her.
I feel awful saying that. She doesn’t live with us, but not far. She comes home to visit with friends, the dog, and she doesn’t have these issues with her dad.
I honestly don’t know what to do. It’s cowardly but the last time she visited I stayed for 10 min and said I had to run to help out a friend. It wasn’t true, I just got out of the house and drove around.
We had a great relationship until she was in HS during Covid. She wanted to spend time with her friends, but my MIL was living with us then and was elderly and frail, so we had to be very careful. We allowed her to see friends outside, but she thinks I am an awful person because I wouldn’t let her do what she wanted.
FWIW the MIL has since passed (not from Covid), but the only memory DD seems to have is that I was incredibly controlling over her life and ruined her entire existence.
It’s exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, as parents we all make mistakes. We are trying to do the right thing in the moment, but our young adult children call us on it later. That's when we need to honor their feelings. Tell her sincerely how you are sorry. You were doing what felt right at the time, but you failed in some ways. Own it. Pride is a failing, OP. it's one of the seven deadly sins. In fact, I think it's number one on the list. Your adult child wants to know that you can admit to faults, that you can see how she struggled. Right now, you aren't willing to admit it. You just run away.
DP. I hear what you are saying, but I struggle with this. If I know I did the wrong thing (a moment of stressed out snappishness, say), I can admit that and simply apologize. In other situations, I am absolutely capable of saying "I was doing the best I could in the moment, and I'm sorry it now doesn't seem like the right thing, and I'm truly sorry that (insert whatever the decision was) left you feeling hurt or struggling." But sometimes that doesn't seem like enough, and my kid seems to want something more, in a way that feels simplistic. But I WAS doing the best I could in the moment. And I don't think taking on all the fault — "I was bad, I was wrong, you were right, and you still are" — actually helps her very much. It might assuage feelings in the short term, but I don't think it prepares her well to live in a world where the very best you can hope for is to have relationships with loving, well-intentioned, inherently flawed, non-omniscient individuals.
So, I don't know. I haven't figured out how to handle these moments. I don't think that's pride, exactly, I think it's more complex than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, as parents we all make mistakes. We are trying to do the right thing in the moment, but our young adult children call us on it later. That's when we need to honor their feelings. Tell her sincerely how you are sorry. You were doing what felt right at the time, but you failed in some ways. Own it. Pride is a failing, OP. it's one of the seven deadly sins. In fact, I think it's number one on the list. Your adult child wants to know that you can admit to faults, that you can see how she struggled. Right now, you aren't willing to admit it. You just run away.
What exactly did OP do wrong?
All kids were affected by Covid and most have turned out OK.
It sounds like the DD has the social problems and can't own up to it. Telling the mom to take the blame doesn't help the DD's social problems but only serves to give DD an external excuse for why she is possibly the problem because it's obvious she can't make friends.
Anonymous wrote:OP, as parents we all make mistakes. We are trying to do the right thing in the moment, but our young adult children call us on it later. That's when we need to honor their feelings. Tell her sincerely how you are sorry. You were doing what felt right at the time, but you failed in some ways. Own it. Pride is a failing, OP. it's one of the seven deadly sins. In fact, I think it's number one on the list. Your adult child wants to know that you can admit to faults, that you can see how she struggled. Right now, you aren't willing to admit it. You just run away.
Anonymous wrote:Why does she come visit if it’s so terrible to be with you?
Anonymous wrote:OP, as parents we all make mistakes. We are trying to do the right thing in the moment, but our young adult children call us on it later. That's when we need to honor their feelings. Tell her sincerely how you are sorry. You were doing what felt right at the time, but you failed in some ways. Own it. Pride is a failing, OP. it's one of the seven deadly sins. In fact, I think it's number one on the list. Your adult child wants to know that you can admit to faults, that you can see how she struggled. Right now, you aren't willing to admit it. You just run away.
Anonymous wrote:She sounds really immature. Was she always behind her peers socially?