Perhaps "having a say" was a bad choice of words, but plenty of posters expressed judgment, anger, hurts etc. when their parent found a new partner or "replaced" the deceased parent. Those same individuals would most likely be upset if their parents expressed negative emotions about their marriage choices or romantic life. Your grieving and their desire to try and a grab some happiness are not and should not be entertained--assuming we are talking about adults and not children who have recently lost a parent. Too many people on this site complain about clingy parents, or bemoaning the lack of food dating partners. If someone can find happiness after grief, no one should judge them.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do all of you who think that adult children should have a say in their widowed parents romantic life's believe that parents should similarly be entitled to mettle in your adult relationships, marriage etc?
OP never, ever once claimed she should have a say. In fact no PPs have either. They said it can hurt. Don't pretend like moving on to marriage after death very quickly is the same as a previously single parent having another chapter in their "romantic life". Its not.
Anonymous wrote:Do all of you who think that adult children should have a say in their widowed parents romantic life's believe that parents should similarly be entitled to mettle in your adult relationships, marriage etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My father started dating the day after the funeral. He was always a dick. But, that sort of thing makes my life easier. He can move on from mom, I can move on from him guilt free.
Wow!
Your dad beat my dad by a week! Altough he did make his first marriage propsal at two weeks afte mom passed so perhaps we beat you there.
Anonymous wrote:My father started dating the day after the funeral. He was always a dick. But, that sort of thing makes my life easier. He can move on from mom, I can move on from him guilt free.
ThisAnonymous wrote:I had a friend remarry quickly (less than two years) after her husband's death. He was sick for a long time.
She still loves her first husband (and father of her children) more than anything. She still mourns him and he is still a fixture in their lives. She, along with her second husband, celebrate his life, talk about him often and raise money and awareness for the disease he faced. Her love her first husband is clearly in no way diminished by her second marriage. And her children are very happy about the marriage (yes, I do know this for a fact - probably better than any other aspect of the situation).
I cannot imagine how hard it is for you OP. I have myself suffered a very close and significant loss of a family member that died way before their time and I know that type of loss is profound and life changing. It must be very hard, when you are still entrenched in that loss, to see your mother "move on." But one thing I heard from my friend is - if she found love and happiness again, which in and of itself feels like a miracle, why should she wait to celebrate that through marriage? She hasn't moved on from her first husband's death, but life is moving forward without her first husband because that's what happens.
Anonymous wrote:Somehow I think the very same people who complain about their parents dating and/or remarrying are the same ones who will be bitching and moaning how they don't have a life, expect too much time from their children, are too needy and don't understand just how very, very busy and stressful their own lives are and they cannot believe how needy their parents are.