Anonymous wrote:Did I miss something, or are you upset because you spent $900 and the ex spent $1,000? There's almost no difference between those two numbers. Also, that's a lot to spend. You could probably dial it back quite a bit.
I'm raising an 11-year-old with my ex and we compare notes before holidays to make sure we're not gifting the same thing. (unless it's something she would want at each house.) But I don't care who spends what, or if she likes his gift more. It just doesn't matter.
I'm not sure it would occur to my daughter to thank me for taking her to Frozen 2. Which I did, and I was super bored and wishing I had seen Zombieland 2 instead.She did get excited to go, though, and that's basically the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:Did I miss something, or are you upset because you spent $900 and the ex spent $1,000? There's almost no difference between those two numbers. Also, that's a lot to spend. You could probably dial it back quite a bit.
I'm raising an 11-year-old with my ex and we compare notes before holidays to make sure we're not gifting the same thing. (unless it's something she would want at each house.) But I don't care who spends what, or if she likes his gift more. It just doesn't matter.
I'm not sure it would occur to my daughter to thank me for taking her to Frozen 2. Which I did, and I was super bored and wishing I had seen Zombieland 2 instead.She did get excited to go, though, and that's basically the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.
Thank you. I feel that this is the piece that has been missed by most on this thread...
How old are the kids? What you're not getting is that it is very different for a parent to enforce please/thank you, than it is to "feel sad about Christmas" and label children as "ungrateful" because they didn't say the exact thing you expected them to. As I and others have written, expecting a "thank you" for movie tickets is a bit beyond what most of us do for younger kids. If they are 15, maybe. But still, it's manners, and manners are taught. If you want your step-kids to have certain manners, then discuss it with their dad. But that's not what this is about, is it? It's not about actually teaching/raising kids. It's about making conclusions that the kids are bad, and their mom is out to get you.
What do you mean, say the exact thing I expected? You mean, thank you? Not sure what else they could have said. The key here is that they didn't say anything.
Kids are early/mid teens. In my mind, they absolutely should be capable of managing a thank you.
I was feeling sad about Christmas because it feels like, no matter what we do, it is never good enough. The kids never fail to let their dad know that the way their mom does things is better. And yes, it colored how I was feeling about the holiday. So sue me. I guess because I'm a stepmom. I'm not allowed to have any feelings? That's how a lot of you are coming across.
I'm expected to have endless wells of love and empathy - and zero frustrations - but none is available when I might need it?
It's pretty interesting, because there are plenty of posts on the teen board that talk about how parents can't wait til their kids leave, how their teens are a******, how DIFFICULT it is - and there is a good deal of sympathy/empathy. It makes me wonder what the response would have been if I posted in the teens board and hadn't identified as a step mom...
And, no, I don't think EW is out to get me. But her actions over the years have proven that she IS out to get DH, and (despite counseling) has no interest in actually co-parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.
Fine, I'm sure you have taught them to say please and thank you for a long time, and this is just one more way to do it. I'm also sure you probably prompted them to do it, and you didn't just expect spontaneous wells of gratitude. I'm also pretty sure you don't have a covert agenda to find reasons to believe that your kids are bad kids, the way OP does.
And, it is weird to expect your small kids to say thank you for everything you spend on them. Do you also ask them to say thank you when you pay the mortgage and day care bill every month? Take them to the doctor? Put gas in the car? In the grocery check-out line? Going to the movies isn't exactly like giving your kid a glass of juice. They don't really understand that you're paying for them, not any more than they understand you're paying the mortgage every month. Saying thank you for buying movie tickets is a more sophisticated social interaction that I wouldn't really expect to happen unprompted until later.
No covert agenda here, but nice try.
I find it really interesting that many of you can't acknowledge that sometimes it is NOT the stepmom who is the bad guy. Whether you want to admit it or not, there are biomoms who can and do go to great lengths to alienate their children from their fathers, and I have been watching in in full force for a number of years. It is very sad, and very challenging to combat.
Maybe I didn't give a lot of backstory in my original post, but I don't know that would have mattered much...
Also, as I just posted, we can agree to disagree about what kids should be saying thank you for, but I think it's a pretty sad commentary that people think teens aren't capable of recognizing that they should offer a simple thank you for things - big, or small. You may disagree with me, but I think that this really contributes to a culture of entitlement...
She did get excited to go, though, and that's basically the same thing.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.
Thank you. I feel that this is the piece that has been missed by most on this thread...
How old are the kids? What you're not getting is that it is very different for a parent to enforce please/thank you, than it is to "feel sad about Christmas" and label children as "ungrateful" because they didn't say the exact thing you expected them to. As I and others have written, expecting a "thank you" for movie tickets is a bit beyond what most of us do for younger kids. If they are 15, maybe. But still, it's manners, and manners are taught. If you want your step-kids to have certain manners, then discuss it with their dad. But that's not what this is about, is it? It's not about actually teaching/raising kids. It's about making conclusions that the kids are bad, and their mom is out to get you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.
Fine, I'm sure you have taught them to say please and thank you for a long time, and this is just one more way to do it. I'm also sure you probably prompted them to do it, and you didn't just expect spontaneous wells of gratitude. I'm also pretty sure you don't have a covert agenda to find reasons to believe that your kids are bad kids, the way OP does.
And, it is weird to expect your small kids to say thank you for everything you spend on them. Do you also ask them to say thank you when you pay the mortgage and day care bill every month? Take them to the doctor? Put gas in the car? In the grocery check-out line? Going to the movies isn't exactly like giving your kid a glass of juice. They don't really understand that you're paying for them, not any more than they understand you're paying the mortgage every month. Saying thank you for buying movie tickets is a more sophisticated social interaction that I wouldn't really expect to happen unprompted until later.
Anonymous wrote:Stop buying stuff and do a vacation next year instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.
Thank you. I feel that this is the piece that has been missed by most on this thread...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I want for Christmas is to see both my parents on Christmas morning; to be together and relaxed with my real family, not shuffled around with complicated plans, spending half the time feeling uncomfortable with strangers.
But hey...sorry I forgot to say thanks for the movie.
(By the way, OP? In real families, when we do things together as a family, like go to the movies, it's not a thank-you situation. That's just spending time together.)
NP. I expect my kids (4&7) to say thank you for taking them to the movies (which I just did for Frozen 2). It's expensive and it's a treat to go, so showing gratitude seems appropriate.