Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone asked me this yesterday and I answered B+. Kids are in their low 30s.
Brought it up to my 2 daughters and told them what I gave myself. One daughter said an A.
The other daughter said she didn't want to hurt my feelings but she was frustrated and hurt at some things that happened in her childhood. And still is.
I have no idea what she means.
I said I was open to hearing her truth.
It makes me feel defensive, of course. I grew up in a single parent household with no money, we simply survived the best we could.
I've had to forgive my parents for being broken people themselves. THey did the best they could.
sigh...
That's what surprises me about this topic. People who are irresponsible, have more children and less resources, their children tend to be more forgiving to them, compared to people who have less children, more resources and try their best to do it right.
I think its more like Stockholm Syndrome, kids are groomed from beginning to not criticize parents but justify their behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:I'd give myself an A and my spouse an A+, and I bet my adult kids (30s) would agree. We are an extremely close family and we all live in the DMV and see each other frequently. We are universally loved by our kids' friends as well.
Anonymous wrote:I would never ask my kids this question. WTH were you thinking? We have done our best. That is good enough for us. If it wasn’t enough, no apologies from us.
Anonymous wrote:I'd give myself an A and my spouse an A+, and I bet my adult kids (30s) would agree. We are an extremely close family and we all live in the DMV and see each other frequently. We are universally loved by our kids' friends as well.
Anonymous wrote:OP, just some perspective: my sister and I are in our 40s. We are very different. I do not think my parents were perfect but I think they had some really hard things to face and they did so with love and they really tried their best. That’s what I would tell them. My sister would say they were terrible and that she’s still really hurt. But there would be no specific examples given, and lots of game-playing to make them guess how they had hurt her. Sigh. This has all played out in family therapy sessions several times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone asked me this yesterday and I answered B+. Kids are in their low 30s.
Brought it up to my 2 daughters and told them what I gave myself. One daughter said an A.
The other daughter said she didn't want to hurt my feelings but she was frustrated and hurt at some things that happened in her childhood. And still is.
I have no idea what she means.
I said I was open to hearing her truth.
It makes me feel defensive, of course. I grew up in a single parent household with no money, we simply survived the best we could.
I've had to forgive my parents for being broken people themselves. THey did the best they could.
sigh...
That's what surprises me about this topic. People who are irresponsible, have more children and less resources, their children tend to be more forgiving to them, compared to people who have less children, more resources and try their best to do it right.
I think its more like Stockholm Syndrome, kids are groomed from beginning to not criticize parents but justify their behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We always think we’re better parents than our kids do. My kids think I’m crazy strict (I’m not!), and my younger one thinks I’m a tiger mother with impossible standards. I consider myself easy going! The gap is hilarious.
I think when our kids becomes parents themselves, things change.
Currently, my kids are not parents.
Anonymous wrote:Someone asked me this yesterday and I answered B+. Kids are in their low 30s.
Brought it up to my 2 daughters and told them what I gave myself. One daughter said an A.
The other daughter said she didn't want to hurt my feelings but she was frustrated and hurt at some things that happened in her childhood. And still is.
I have no idea what she means.
I said I was open to hearing her truth.
It makes me feel defensive, of course. I grew up in a single parent household with no money, we simply survived the best we could.
I've had to forgive my parents for being broken people themselves. THey did the best they could.
sigh...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never ask my kids this question. WTH were you thinking? We have done our best. That is good enough for us. If it wasn’t enough, no apologies from us.
Hi Mom! We already know you don't care. Just don't be surprised when we aren't there for you as you age and die. We'll do our best from afar. What goes around comes around.