Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP never came back so either a troll her she didn’t like our response.
OP here. I’m here, but I was trying to remain neutral.
I’m the weekend sports parent/sibling. My sibling has been making a big deal over our parents attending my child’s (6) games on Saturday mornings. After the games we have lunch. It’s the only day of the week we see my parents. My sibling’s child’s games overlap. We gave a standing invite to my parents on Saturday, and they choose to come on Saturdays. My sibling (who enjoys the 2-3 times a week babysitting/time spent with grandparents) is complaining that they spend every weekend with us. We don’t force them, but they are taking it out on us. I just wanted to be sure I wasn’t going crazy. Your replies landed well.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for outside perspective on this family dynamic (all kids and grandparents live locally):
The grandparents have two adult children. Each adult child has two kids
2–3 afternoons a week, the grandmother watches one set of grandchildren after school (they’re dropped off by one parent and picked up by the other after work)
Every weekend, the grandparents attend the other set of grandchildren’s sports games in the morning
As a result, they rarely or never attend the sports games of the grandkids they watch during the week
From an outside point of view, is this a fair balance of time and support? Or would you expect them to make more effort to attend the games of the grandkids they see during the week? Not looking to start drama, just curious what others think is reasonable or typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the grandparents can spend their time however they want once they are issued an invitation? If it’s important to the kid they can say “hey gran can you please come to my game this weekend?” I do not see what fair has to do with it. As an adult I know life isn’t fair and to ask for what I want.
So you are ok with grandparents showing favoritism to your child? I’m not.