Anonymous wrote:You don't turn it down. You make your children go and have fun with their grandparents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would it kill you to just go once or twice?
+1 Seriously. After reading DCUM posts for several years, I can see that a lot of people just don't want to be inconvenienced when these are the types of things that can strengthen family relationships and teach kids the importance of those relationships.
+1
Go to the pool, op. Making loved ones happy takes priority over placating what kids merely like now and then. And I say that as someone who hates pools, is disgusted by them, and finds them nothing more than a gross chlorinated communal bathtub.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would it kill you to just go once or twice?
+1 Seriously. After reading DCUM posts for several years, I can see that a lot of people just don't want to be inconvenienced when these are the types of things that can strengthen family relationships and teach kids the importance of those relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think the people pointing out that your kid's are spoiled are dead on.
But I can also relate. My sister in law has a community pool and lives an hour away. We get pressured to take our non-swimming toddlers to that pool. Yes, it's a great pool. Yes we go once a summer. But it's FAR. And my kids are just as happy at the spray fountain a block from our house which is a lot less work for me.
What I don't like is that it's somehow my responsibility to make my SIL feel like she's "getting her money's worth" at her community pool. And if we don't agree to come all the time than somehow it's being "wasted".
All that said, I do think just telling your kids that your going to grandmas. Oh and by the way, pack your suits because there's a pool. If you don't want to swim, fine, but we'll be sitting by the pool for an hour, let's go, no opinions please.
Op again, this is our exact situation. My mom calls every single week. She’s also about an hour away. I get that it’s a novelty to her, and we DO visit and use the pool from time to time to make her happy, but considering we have a pool at the middle of our own community, driving an hour to swim every week doesn’t make sense. Also, this pool is freezing and the kids just don’t like it for more than 15 minutes. But yes, we too get the guilt trips and are made to feel like the move there was just for us to have pool access.
My kids are anything but spoiled, but the cold pool isn’t novel to them. They’d rather ride bikes on the bike trail, play tennis, wander the woods, etc, than swim in a cold pool.
OP - you so so miss the point, and your kids are spoiled if you still think this is about a fun time for the kids. It isn't about the pool. Let me say this again. It isn't about the pool. It is about seeing grandma, which I think is less fun than it used to be for them. Do you notice that nothing on this list is anything that grandma can participate in or even watch? Just take the kids as often as you feel you should to go see their grandma. Don't get caught up with the language. Just be a mensch and let grandma have an hour visit. An hour. Be glad this is just about "hanging at a pool" for an hour, and not being trapped in a stuffy livingroom watching Ellen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yours are the first kids I’ve ever heard of who get pooled out. It’s my dream.
Same. My kids grew up in Florida with a pool in the backyard. They lived in our pool. We also had a huge community pool with a water park and they were there all the time as well. I don't think my kids would have ever become "pooled out".
Anonymous wrote:Would it kill you to just go once or twice?