Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand your automatic “no” response. Kids are able to fly and might possibly enjoy the time with grandparents. Otherwise, fly them or drive there and you and DH go on a vacation from there. People are so controlling...
Op here. I think my "automatic no" was partly the flying thing (b/c it really is hard to imagine that they would be cool with flying without us when they honestly are not cool with flying in the row behind us! Several times we have had the four seats split into two rows and DH and I end up each taking one b/c they don't want to be sitting "all alone on the plane!" Together. ??)
But if I'm being honest with myself, it is largely due to the ridiculousness (at least to me) of her looking forward to spending an entire WEEK with them when she has never offered to spend even one NIGHT (or even a 3-hour stretch of evening) with them without us. And on the rare occasion that it happens (because we have asked them to 3 or 4 times over the past 8-9 years), it is not well received and is always met with some expression of passive-aggressive disappointment in not being able to be with DH and me that evening. (Mostly DH, I suspect.) Even when we go to our former hometown to visit, we are reluctant to ask them to watch the kids for an evening so that DH and I can have dinner and reconnect with former college or high school friends because of how they react as though we are stealing precious time from them. It is never an "oh yes, go, have fun! And that will give us a great opportunity to do something on our own with the kids!" (And our kids are very easy.)
Neither of us dislike MIL or FIL...they are good people who love their grandkids, for sure. But also they are not particularly warm and fuzzy "grandparent-y" fun types so I would be kind of surprised if the kids asked to go there without us. (MIL is far more likely to snip at our kids that they need to eat one more bite of broccoli than sneak them a piece of chocolate cake, and she often relates to the kids by telling them stories of her DS--their dad--as a comparison to what they are doing/are interested in at the moment--almost as though she is sharing her memories of his childhood as competition rather than letting their achievements and interests stand on their own.)
All this aside, I really do not want to come off as controlling (to her or to anyone, really), so I will try to keep her perspective in mind. (I just don't want to be a 3+ hour plane ride away if/when she decides she is over the whole "Camp Gram" situation!)