Anonymous wrote:OP, I had a similar issue come up with a food allergy with one of my three children and my mother not taking it seriously, even to the point of not wanting to carry his epi-pen when she took him somewhere. I stopped trusting her to carry that, let alone inject it in an emergency so I stopped letting her take him places. I lost it once and actually screamed at the top of my lungs at my mother about how my child will probably have to carry the epi for the rest of his life, and now i believe she takes things more seriously, but he is old enough now to start carrying it himself as well. The combination of yelling at her, educating her more, and restricting access to him for his personal safety, did the trick with her, but I lost almost all respect I had for her at that time. She is also getting older and losing her filter.
It's really hard to educate people about certain illnesses.
I thought the poster who gives the advice quoted below advice was good, until I realized it was really conflicting. How do you both educate someone close to you about a life-threatening issue and yet simlutaneously stop expecting things from them? It's hard, especially if they see your children a lot.
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
I think this is good advice and while I think this person is probably advocating still telling them about these issues without expecting support, it's almost impossible in practice, at least in my experience. We all expect something from our parents. Just saying "don't expect anything else from them" is not realistic.
What I do now is have my husband communicate with them about these types of issues because he is less emotional about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.
A few thoughts:
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
2) Your increased sensitivity around your infertility is a separate issue from the incident with your son. I can understand why you might be feeling more emotionally raw right now, but be careful about expecting people to walk on eggshells around you on things unrelated to the fertility issue because again, you're setting them up to let you down.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
All of this. This is who your parents are, and expecting them to be different is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. And in general, expecting people to react a certain way, especially if they don't have all the information, is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. Your parents are almost certainly not *trying* to be unkind; they very likely learned to minimize or downplay their own negative emotions and experiences, and this is now they do it. Or they might just be oddballs who react inappropriately. Either way, this is who they are, and the sooner you stop expecting them to be someone else, the better.
Uhhh, these people are coming to stay in Op's home. They are going to be around her child and they should know that the child has a history of gagging/choking on food, more so than is usual (according to the observations of his daycare). Of course Op should have told them about this issue.
Their reaction speaks volumes about the complete lack of regard that they give to Op's concern. These are the types that will give the kid pear chunks just to prove to Op that she is "wrong" and over reacting.
Op should never leave her son with these people. Ever. She should set the table so that her son is in between Op and her dh. Sounds harsh but too bad.
Pp here who wrote the numbered list above. You completely missed the point, which was about emotional expectations. OP knows her parents, she knows they are dismissive, and when she expects them to behave otherwise, she's setting herself up for disappointment. Nothing of what was posted by me or the poster below me had anything to do with whether OP should leave her child alone with her parents (I actually agree with you that she shouldn't), it was all about whether she should continue to expect she can tell her parents about something like this with the expectation of support or comfort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.
A few thoughts:
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
2) Your increased sensitivity around your infertility is a separate issue from the incident with your son. I can understand why you might be feeling more emotionally raw right now, but be careful about expecting people to walk on eggshells around you on things unrelated to the fertility issue because again, you're setting them up to let you down.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
All of this. This is who your parents are, and expecting them to be different is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. And in general, expecting people to react a certain way, especially if they don't have all the information, is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. Your parents are almost certainly not *trying* to be unkind; they very likely learned to minimize or downplay their own negative emotions and experiences, and this is now they do it. Or they might just be oddballs who react inappropriately. Either way, this is who they are, and the sooner you stop expecting them to be someone else, the better.
Uhhh, these people are coming to stay in Op's home. They are going to be around her child and they should know that the child has a history of gagging/choking on food, more so than is usual (according to the observations of his daycare). Of course Op should have told them about this issue.
Their reaction speaks volumes about the complete lack of regard that they give to Op's concern. These are the types that will give the kid pear chunks just to prove to Op that she is "wrong" and over reacting.
Op should never leave her son with these people. Ever. She should set the table so that her son is in between Op and her dh. Sounds harsh but too bad.
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.
A few thoughts:
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
2) Your increased sensitivity around your infertility is a separate issue from the incident with your son. I can understand why you might be feeling more emotionally raw right now, but be careful about expecting people to walk on eggshells around you on things unrelated to the fertility issue because again, you're setting them up to let you down.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
All of this. This is who your parents are, and expecting them to be different is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. And in general, expecting people to react a certain way, especially if they don't have all the information, is setting them up to fail and you to be frustrated. Your parents are almost certainly not *trying* to be unkind; they very likely learned to minimize or downplay their own negative emotions and experiences, and this is now they do it. Or they might just be oddballs who react inappropriately. Either way, this is who they are, and the sooner you stop expecting them to be someone else, the better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. That reaction is truly appalling. I would not leave your son alone with them for a second. At best their judgement and critical thinking skills are impaired. At worst they have a real mean streak.
I'm glad that your son is o.k., Op. Were your parents like this when you were growing up?
Holy overboard.
Sometimes people laugh at inappropriate times. It is a nervous response. It doesn't mean they are malicious, or that they can't be trusted. It's really difficult to judge the situation over the internet.
Their grandson choked and had to be evaluated at the hospital. Their response was to laugh hysterically and tell Op that it "wasn't a big deal". Nope, they would not be watching my child even for a second.
I doubt he "had" to be evaluated at the hospital. OP chose to have him evaluated. He didn't need to go to the hospital for the choking, because the daycare staff dealt with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You did a feeding evaluation because of one incident of choking on a piece of pear?
Yes, this struck me as a bit of an overreaction as well. OP, sorry, but I snickered to myself about your reaction as well. I wouldn't have done it outright the way your mother did - that was rude and you have a right to be upset with her over it - but it does appear you overreact quite a bit. the eval bc of one choking incident, and now your overreaction to your mom laughing. It's rude, yes, but you need to calm down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.
A few thoughts:
1) That is a lot more information than you gave in your initial post. When you don't give full information but expect people to act as if they had full information, you're setting them up to let you down in their response, and that's not fair to them. I realize your parents may have had more of this information already than we had, but it's something to think about.
2) Your increased sensitivity around your infertility is a separate issue from the incident with your son. I can understand why you might be feeling more emotionally raw right now, but be careful about expecting people to walk on eggshells around you on things unrelated to the fertility issue because again, you're setting them up to let you down.
3) You know your parents have a history of minimizing your feelings and experiences, so stop expecting anything else from them. They are not the people to turn to for support when you go through a stressful episode with your kid. Since the evaluation came back fine, I probably wouldn't have mentioned it to them at all, and definitely not with the expectation of the sympathy and support you were looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe that is her nervous reaction? Why was it surprising this time?
But really OP, this wasn’t serious. Age appropriate behavior. Kids do this all the tine and why you have to watch them while they eat.
This--if she often laughs inappropriately, then you know that is her reaction. Maybe it's how she reacts when she's nervous. Maybe it's what she does to avoid getting anxious. Whatever, you know she does this and you're freaking out about it--why, exactly? Who cares?
Your son is fine, and I would probably laugh (internally) at a parent who had a feeding evaluation done on a toddler who choked once. It happens. Kids put too much in their mouths or they don't chew enough. You keep an eye on them until they get better at it.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is ridiculous to do a feeding eval at a hospital based on this. And basically the hospital told you it wasn’t an issue. I think your mom probably laughed at what the hospital told you and likely thinks you are paranoid. I would laugh if someone told me they reacted like this to a mild choke. Like I laugh at people who go to the ER because they have a cold or stub a toe.
Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.
Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I guess I feel the need to defend myself a bit here. My son’s been having issues with feeding - gagging, choking, hard swallows, coughing - for the past 8 months (as in, when he started solids). The daycare has catered meals; he already had a designated lunch buddy (an adult who sits with him while he eats) and had been getting food that is chopped in smaller pieces than his same-age peers. So after he got a piece of pear the size of a Cheerio lodged in his throat, his pediatrician suggested he get a feeding evaluation done. A SLP with extra training in feeding issues (swallowing, chewing, moving the tongue) does the evaluation. It turned out his mouth skills are fine, but I don’t think I overreacted by taking this seriously.
As a side note, I got married and had him in my late thirties. It’s looking like we won’t be able to have another child. And I think that pain, in combination with “trying to keep a toddler alive” is making me more sensitive.
On the other hand, my parents have a history of invalidating and minimizing my feelings and experiences. This interaction just felt different because they were minimizing what happened to my child.