Anonymous wrote:Since the parents go on other trips and visit the brother, I think their reluctance to visit the OP is odd. Can your brother offer some insight?
Anonymous wrote:There must be something. Maybe it's bathroom related, something they find embarrassing to talk about. Sleep problems. Something.
Op, do not blow it up into them not wanting to be in your lives. Assuming the best, I guess, means, assume this is about their age and what they are actually capable of. Not what you think they are capable of.
At some point elders stop traveling. This is just coming much sooner than you ever expected. But it happens to everyone, eventually. Make peace with that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. They do some other travel. Drives to see my brother (about 5 hours), a driving trip to Maine (even further from where they live), flight to Florida to see my mom's sister.
DH's parents are both deceased and he has no siblings or cousins, so we don't have family on his side.
That’s one sad existence for your spouse. No parents, siblings or even cousins???
Wow. What a weird and cruel response. My spouse was an only child to immigrant parents who both died before she finished high school. Yes, it's a tragedy, but it's not a "sad existence."
Anonymous wrote:OP here. They do some other travel. Drives to see my brother (about 5 hours), a driving trip to Maine (even further from where they live), flight to Florida to see my mom's sister.
DH's parents are both deceased and he has no siblings or cousins, so we don't have family on his side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to ask a stupid question but have you ever said to your mother, in those words, that you don’t feel like a priority and you need her help in this season of life with shouldering the travel burden?
If you have, and this is what has come of it, I’m so so sorry. If you haven’t maybe try that first. I think people make assumptions (which make their lives easier) like “oh Larla is too BUSY for us to visit or Larla LOVES the road trip every year” but if confronted directly will make a change.
This is OP again. Not a stupid question - yes, I have on more than one occasio. There is a pretty predictable pattern... she will quickly say that I am trying to make her feel bad or that I am getting on her case. I will then cry, and she will yell at me for being "emotional" and then I will get really upset and get off the phone as quickly as possible. The next time we talk, she will act as if it didn't happen. Real healthy stuff.
This happened a few months ago right after Easter. This was the first year we did not spend spring break visiting them because we had to work.
My mother used to play the "I was only joking, you're too sensitive" card anytime she made insulting comments. I went no contact for a while, and since she does, actually, want to see me and the kids, she dialed it way down. I cannot trust her, though, because any time she's under stress, her natural meanness can come right back.
OP, I just wouldn't put myself out for these people. I am in contact principally because of my father, who is not a bad sort, but completely under my mother's thumb. You could visit just once a year and be done with it. Or even less. Take a leaf out of their book and just do what's convenient for YOU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. They do some other travel. Drives to see my brother (about 5 hours), a driving trip to Maine (even further from where they live), flight to Florida to see my mom's sister.
DH's parents are both deceased and he has no siblings or cousins, so we don't have family on his side.
That’s one sad existence for your spouse. No parents, siblings or even cousins???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to ask a stupid question but have you ever said to your mother, in those words, that you don’t feel like a priority and you need her help in this season of life with shouldering the travel burden?
If you have, and this is what has come of it, I’m so so sorry. If you haven’t maybe try that first. I think people make assumptions (which make their lives easier) like “oh Larla is too BUSY for us to visit or Larla LOVES the road trip every year” but if confronted directly will make a change.
This is OP again. Not a stupid question - yes, I have on more than one occasio. There is a pretty predictable pattern... she will quickly say that I am trying to make her feel bad or that I am getting on her case. I will then cry, and she will yell at me for being "emotional" and then I will get really upset and get off the phone as quickly as possible. The next time we talk, she will act as if it didn't happen. Real healthy stuff.
This happened a few months ago right after Easter. This was the first year we did not spend spring break visiting them because we had to work.
I’m sorry. This is selfish manipulation.
Op here - thank you, I appreciate that! I know it is intellectually but somehow still want it to be different. Feels pretty pathetic that I am still bothered by this as a 40 year old adult.
Anonymous wrote:You need to accept that this is the level of interaction they want. Keep in mind that for a lot of old people, they don't ENJOY traveling - old people get set in their ways, their routines, their schedules. Their hearing and sight is going so being in their own home is easier - they know where everything is, etc. So traveling has to be worth it for them to give all that up.
When my grandfather lived with us, he had a REALLY hard time with eating dinner at 7 or 7:30 at night - he was used to 5:30 and could push to 6. He felt our house was always way too cold for him. He didn't ever want to go upstairs - I think it hurt but he had too much pride to say so. Being old is hard work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to ask a stupid question but have you ever said to your mother, in those words, that you don’t feel like a priority and you need her help in this season of life with shouldering the travel burden?
If you have, and this is what has come of it, I’m so so sorry. If you haven’t maybe try that first. I think people make assumptions (which make their lives easier) like “oh Larla is too BUSY for us to visit or Larla LOVES the road trip every year” but if confronted directly will make a change.
This is OP again. Not a stupid question - yes, I have on more than one occasio. There is a pretty predictable pattern... she will quickly say that I am trying to make her feel bad or that I am getting on her case. I will then cry, and she will yell at me for being "emotional" and then I will get really upset and get off the phone as quickly as possible. The next time we talk, she will act as if it didn't happen. Real healthy stuff.
This happened a few months ago right after Easter. This was the first year we did not spend spring break visiting them because we had to work.