Anonymous wrote:I mean, she?s obviously an adult who can make her own decisions. Whatever.
Last night, we had an 85th birthday celebration for my mom. The rest of the family is all basically local (within a two hour?s drive of the party here in DC) ? me, my four siblings, and their kids. It was lovely.
My oldest daughter lives in Baltimore, so really not a bad drive at all, decided to party with her work friends for St. Patrick?s day and a coworker?s birthday back in Bmore instead of coming to her grandmother?s birthday party. And grandma is healthy, but at 85 I feel like every birthday is important.
I?m just upset. Do I have a right to be? Or am I being too ?dramatic??
Anonymous wrote:
Your daughter is rude. I would expect my local kids to come to their grandparents’ birthdays.
I hope she realizes this before it’s too late.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, she’s obviously an adult who can make her own decisions. Whatever.
Last night, we had an 85th birthday celebration for my mom. The rest of the family is all basically local (within a two hour’s drive of the party here in DC) — me, my four siblings, and their kids. It was lovely.
My oldest daughter lives in Baltimore, so really not a bad drive at all, decided to party with her work friends for St. Patrick’s day and a coworker’s birthday back in Bmore instead of coming to her grandmother’s birthday party. And grandma is healthy, but at 85 I feel like every birthday is important.
I’m just upset. Do I have a right to be? Or am I being too ‘dramatic’?
Anonymous wrote:At 25 I was kind of clueless, so I’d give this a pass and just let her know she was missed. It’s possible the work gathering included someone she’s romantically interested in, which of course she would not tell you, and at that age getting your groove in can be more immediately compelling than a grandma’s birthday.
Don’t forget it’s possible and probable that your mother means more to you than she does to your daughter, so keep in perspective what their actual relationship is like.
Anonymous wrote:Party for St. Patrick’s Day??? That’s not for another 10 days. WTH?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I'm going against the grain but I would absolutely tell her I was disappointed she didn't attend and that we don't know how many birthdays grandma has left, and see what her response is. And I would expect my mother would do the same thing if I made the choice your daughter did. We are a "tell it like it is" family although we say our peace respectfully and don't nag or carry on.
Np. If you were my mom and "told it like it was" then I would probably skip more events. If you nag or try to make someone guilty than they might not want to be in your company. I'm sure the dd can and will see grandma another day. I think the older generation can use that "her last birthday card" for years and at some point it gets tiresome.
We are a close knit family so I'm going to go with what works.
Also I think you read my post wrong, I said we don't nag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure why you’re getting skewered here, by people who are claiming you have no right to your daughter’s time. I think you know you actually don’t, and that this is a decision your daughter is making on her own. That’s why I think it hurts you, because she’s showing you her values.
I’m 29 and definitely would not have snubbed one of my grandparents this way. I’m also white, for context, so it isn’t like there’s some cultural factor as play that would have compelled me to feel like I had to go.
I’d guess that you didn’t explicitly stress the importance of this type stuff growing up. What she’s doing is selfish.
Wow you are “white” ?...
And apparently perfect.
This has nothing to do with being white, black, pink, purple or any other color!
I thought she was 25? Still an adult. PP is 29
We have no idea what the relationship between grandma and darling grand daughter is.
No mom is not responsible in anyway to tell her DD that she should have showed up. She’s 29 an adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure why you’re getting skewered here, by people who are claiming you have no right to your daughter’s time. I think you know you actually don’t, and that this is a decision your daughter is making on her own. That’s why I think it hurts you, because she’s showing you her values.
I’m 29 and definitely would not have snubbed one of my grandparents this way. I’m also white, for context, so it isn’t like there’s some cultural factor as play that would have compelled me to feel like I had to go.
I’d guess that you didn’t explicitly stress the importance of this type stuff growing up. What she’s doing is selfish.
You nailed it, PP. You are what I hope my children will be like when they are your age.