Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You split Sat between your mom and his. One mom gets brunch together and the other gets dinner together. Sunday it’s just you and the kids.
This. Let them see the grandkids.
This is why people dislike boomers. It’s Mother’s Day and OPs daughter has something planned but that should be thrown away because wouldn’t the boomer grannie prefer to be celebrated by her grandkids? It’s generational narcissism.
Go throw your hissy fit on grandparents if you feel you aren’t celebrated enough but stop trying to grab holidays that have nothing to do with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You split Sat between your mom and his. One mom gets brunch together and the other gets dinner together. Sunday it’s just you and the kids.
This. Let them see the grandkids.
Anonymous wrote:You split Sat between your mom and his. One mom gets brunch together and the other gets dinner together. Sunday it’s just you and the kids.
Anonymous wrote:You split Sat between your mom and his. One mom gets brunch together and the other gets dinner together. Sunday it’s just you and the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He visits his mom Saturday no kids.
You visit your mom Saturday with kids.
Sunday everyone stays home and you have a family day.
If her mom has gotten the kids every previous Mother’s Day wouldn’t it make sense for his mom to get them this year?
Not necessarily. The drive sounds much longer to MIL. I wouldn't make the kids do that. They can do something a different time with kids+MIL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He visits his mom Saturday no kids.
You visit your mom Saturday with kids.
Sunday everyone stays home and you have a family day.
If her mom has gotten the kids every previous Mother’s Day wouldn’t it make sense for his mom to get them this year?