Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“You’re disappointed because you would have liked to go. Okay, I understand. We’ll keep that in mind if we plan another trip.”
That’s it. You don’t need to apologize or overexplain. Just acknowledge and keep the conversation to a minimum. Don’t feel back or take the guilt bait. You made the right move.
That's not a good response at all.
Anonymous wrote:“You’re disappointed because you would have liked to go. Okay, I understand. We’ll keep that in mind if we plan another trip.”
That’s it. You don’t need to apologize or overexplain. Just acknowledge and keep the conversation to a minimum. Don’t feel back or take the guilt bait. You made the right move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t tell my mom about our travel because she is so eager to join and pouts about not doing family trips but she just can’t handle travel. We learned the hard way that how she spends her day is going to be different than ours. She wants to sleep in, needs 2 hours to get ready, needs to be within a 45 minute radius of her hotel room and her own bathroom (anxiety, not digestive issues), doesn’t want to eat breakfast, wants to eat lunch as the main meal, wants dinner at 4:30, can’t hold her drink, and walks very, very slowly. It leaves about 15 minutes of vacation time per day- and she doesn’t tolerate going separate ways.
All of that is stuff we could happily accommodate if we were prepared for it in advance, but instead she makes us keep this story going that she is an intrepid, lively traveler who loves to explore. So we can’t ever acknowledge her limitations but have to pretend that all of these accomodations are our idea and she’s just patiently going along with us. It’s exhausting and weird. My kid is older now, but she’ll still pretend it’s DD’s needs and at 11 am will be like, DD needs to eat, let’s get back for lunch. And DD is looking at her like she’s crazy, because she is.
In the movie When Harry Met Sally, Harry says to Sally that she’s the worst kind of high maintenance person because she thinks she’s a low-maintenance person. That’s my mom.
Well it sounds like you allowed it and forced your child to have miserable vacations because you won’t say no to your mother and instead of being honest with her you don’t tell your mother about travel, so you’re teaching your child to withhold information. Wait until you’re the one not being looped in.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t tell my mom about our travel because she is so eager to join and pouts about not doing family trips but she just can’t handle travel. We learned the hard way that how she spends her day is going to be different than ours. She wants to sleep in, needs 2 hours to get ready, needs to be within a 45 minute radius of her hotel room and her own bathroom (anxiety, not digestive issues), doesn’t want to eat breakfast, wants to eat lunch as the main meal, wants dinner at 4:30, can’t hold her drink, and walks very, very slowly. It leaves about 15 minutes of vacation time per day- and she doesn’t tolerate going separate ways.
All of that is stuff we could happily accommodate if we were prepared for it in advance, but instead she makes us keep this story going that she is an intrepid, lively traveler who loves to explore. So we can’t ever acknowledge her limitations but have to pretend that all of these accomodations are our idea and she’s just patiently going along with us. It’s exhausting and weird. My kid is older now, but she’ll still pretend it’s DD’s needs and at 11 am will be like, DD needs to eat, let’s get back for lunch. And DD is looking at her like she’s crazy, because she is.
In the movie When Harry Met Sally, Harry says to Sally that she’s the worst kind of high maintenance person because she thinks she’s a low-maintenance person. That’s my mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a different poster. To all those advising this poster (any many others on this forum) that they shouldn’t share anything with their parents, how do you suggest to handle when they point blank ask “what are you doing this weekend?” Is the suggestion to lie? Or keep evading (but not sure how long someone can reasonably do that…)
I’m genuinely curious about this approach that seems to be repeatedly suggested on this board.
White lies are your secret power!
It’s a little more complicated than that when you are your parents emergency contact and they don’t know you’ll be there states away, or whatever. It’s easy to say “just don’t tell them” but a different story when it matters that they know you are or aren’t the one they can count on in an emergency.
Yes, I always tell my parents where and when I'll be traveling. It's a good safety protocol - I don't have siblings. I also expect them to be mature adults and not have a fit of FOMO.
If they do have a fit and become senile, then I will change emergency contacts and perhaps give them vaguer details. But I won't lie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a different poster. To all those advising this poster (any many others on this forum) that they shouldn’t share anything with their parents, how do you suggest to handle when they point blank ask “what are you doing this weekend?” Is the suggestion to lie? Or keep evading (but not sure how long someone can reasonably do that…)
I’m genuinely curious about this approach that seems to be repeatedly suggested on this board.
White lies are your secret power!
It’s a little more complicated than that when you are your parents emergency contact and they don’t know you’ll be there states away, or whatever. It’s easy to say “just don’t tell them” but a different story when it matters that they know you are or aren’t the one they can count on in an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a different poster. To all those advising this poster (any many others on this forum) that they shouldn’t share anything with their parents, how do you suggest to handle when they point blank ask “what are you doing this weekend?” Is the suggestion to lie? Or keep evading (but not sure how long someone can reasonably do that…)
I’m genuinely curious about this approach that seems to be repeatedly suggested on this board.
White lies are your secret power!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a different poster. To all those advising this poster (any many others on this forum) that they shouldn’t share anything with their parents, how do you suggest to handle when they point blank ask “what are you doing this weekend?” Is the suggestion to lie? Or keep evading (but not sure how long someone can reasonably do that…)
I’m genuinely curious about this approach that seems to be repeatedly suggested on this board.
White lies are your secret power!
Anonymous wrote:I’m a different poster. To all those advising this poster (any many others on this forum) that they shouldn’t share anything with their parents, how do you suggest to handle when they point blank ask “what are you doing this weekend?” Is the suggestion to lie? Or keep evading (but not sure how long someone can reasonably do that…)
I’m genuinely curious about this approach that seems to be repeatedly suggested on this board.