Anonymous wrote:I'm more like your sister, but I'm trying to understand why she would vacation with you. Even for a parent's birthday, we wouldn't do it. We'd do a celebration with them on our own, and let you do yours.
Anonymous wrote:I'm more like your sister, but I'm trying to understand why she would vacation with you. Even for a parent's birthday, we wouldn't do it. We'd do a celebration with them on our own, and let you do yours.
Anonymous wrote:Tell her to screw herself.
And in 10 years you can compare which colleges/universities and degrees each of these kids are graduating from.
I guarantee helicopter mom will be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:"Thanks for your concern, but I'm not going to get into a debate about parenting methods."
And then:
"Again, thanks for your concern, but like I said, I'm not going to debate parenting methods. Please stop bringing this up."
And then:
"We've talked about this: stop bringing this up."
After that, if she brings it up, either immediately change the subject ("What's your favorite summer drink?") or just straight up leave the room.
Just because someone tries to hand you a bag of dog sh!t doesn't mean you have to take it from them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are your kids overweight and addicted to screens? Look in a mirror.
She might not have been right to say anything but I'm sure there is a problem on your end too.
Miss Marple has entered the chat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I would be extra careful not to create envy in her poor children - so no pulling out of iPads, no walking in with fries, etc. It’s good for your kids to have a detox from all that, frankly. You don’t need to live like this all year - just when your families get together.
I’d go the other way and stop trying to accommodate by doing things like eating in the car. Your last sentence could apply to sister, too. A couple movies and some junk food during a week of vacation is not going to hurt her kids.
Anonymous wrote:When cousins are together on vacation, there's a sense that yes, they're part of the same family--but then different family rules and parenting decisions are more obvious. It makes it hard for the more strict parents to uphold their own particular standards, and that may have made your sister defensive about her own choices. Nonetheless, it was rude of her to challenge you.
You certainly don't have to change your own parenting, but just be aware that life will be easier for everyone if you are separate for the things you do differently. (Food, media, bedtimes, souvenirs, etc.) We've had vacations with cousins where the other kids came back from a nuclear family outing with ice cream and expensive souvenirs. Even if we love ice cream and are OK with souvenirs (but might have picked cheaper ones), the contrast in the moment of the haves and the have-nots is unpleasant.
Anonymous wrote:I would be so tempted to tell her to FO. But not very productive!
Anonymous wrote:I would go out and get the kids some Mickey D’s in response. And have them eat it in front of her kids.
Anonymous wrote:
I would be extra careful not to create envy in her poor children - so no pulling out of iPads, no walking in with fries, etc. It’s good for your kids to have a detox from all that, frankly. You don’t need to live like this all year - just when your families get together.