Anonymous wrote:“But I tried my best!”
Anonymous wrote:Like a previous poster, my parents come in and comment on all the improvements/projects that we should be doing on our home. I'd honestly prefer if they just offered to help instead of pointing out flaws.
They also comment on what the kids are or are not doing in terms of activities. My kids are very different than me or my siblings, and I parent them a lot differently than my parents did me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom doesn’t believe in divorce, despite cheating and abuse, and also believes in moving in with adult children instead of assisted living or nursing home care. Those are both “family ethics” that my sib and I strongly disagree with and won’t impose on our own kids.
Where is she from?
This sounds like practices that are still quite common in many countries outside of the US.
Ohio, for many generations. I have no idea where she got those beliefs from (her own mother, I assume), but my father sure took advantage of them.
Same, Illinois.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom doesn’t believe in divorce, despite cheating and abuse, and also believes in moving in with adult children instead of assisted living or nursing home care. Those are both “family ethics” that my sib and I strongly disagree with and won’t impose on our own kids.
Where is she from?
This sounds like practices that are still quite common in many countries outside of the US.
Ohio, for many generations. I have no idea where she got those beliefs from (her own mother, I assume), but my father sure took advantage of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have this dynamic where my mom cheated on my dad and is still with her AP. My dad is remarried to someone who he met later. And she's always insisting that we're a happy modern family and that these things "just happen in some families" and that she and my dad's wife are friends, etc. Meanwhile, my dad's wife does not like her and will sh*t-talk her to anyone who will listen, including me. My mom is always offering to come over to my dad's house for dinner-- that's right, she's inviting herself-- so that she can "spend more time with the kids", even though the kids hate dinner and sit at the table for max 10 minutes.
If I object to any of this, decline to validate her beliefs, or show any sign of stress while traveling with small children, I'm "carrying negative energy". So that's what I'll never do to my adult children.
Wow, sounds like your mom is carrying a lot of unresolved guilt.
Anonymous wrote:We have this dynamic where my mom cheated on my dad and is still with her AP. My dad is remarried to someone who he met later. And she's always insisting that we're a happy modern family and that these things "just happen in some families" and that she and my dad's wife are friends, etc. Meanwhile, my dad's wife does not like her and will sh*t-talk her to anyone who will listen, including me. My mom is always offering to come over to my dad's house for dinner-- that's right, she's inviting herself-- so that she can "spend more time with the kids", even though the kids hate dinner and sit at the table for max 10 minutes.
If I object to any of this, decline to validate her beliefs, or show any sign of stress while traveling with small children, I'm "carrying negative energy". So that's what I'll never do to my adult children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom doesn’t believe in divorce, despite cheating and abuse, and also believes in moving in with adult children instead of assisted living or nursing home care. Those are both “family ethics” that my sib and I strongly disagree with and won’t impose on our own kids.
Where is she from?
This sounds like practices that are still quite common in many countries outside of the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's share those so we can have better relationships with our adult children.
This is grossly unfair because our lives today are light years away from our parents. There are so many choices available to parents today that ours did not have. It's apples and footballs!
Nobody is a perfect parent but most are doing their very best with the resources available to them. Parents, in many ways, actually have it harder today than even 20 years ago and we don't know what we might do in any given circumstances.