Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP—you’re asking for “productive” advice. With the situation you’ve giving, it’s like asking for advice on how to stay cool while you’re in the middle of a burning building.
Instead of trying to do things that manage their behavior, focus on re-setting YOUR mindset and behaviors.
-Stay in a hotel
-Stop caring that they are grumbling. Be okay with just ignoring.
-Go out for your own meals.
-Bring your own food.
-Come up with a mantra to say to yourself when they start commenting on eating.
-Again, stay in a hotel.
-Even better, stop visiting. If they want to see you, they can visit you.
+1 for the bolded. You cannot change them, OP, you can only change yourself.
But also, don't let them shame kids for normal eating and if they do start to impose disordered eating on kids, visits are over. My aunt's comments about my (skinny) weight and eating as a teen (I was on cross country), did have an effect on me. I realize it was her own anorexia talking but the truth is my mom should have put a stop to it. Keep people like that away from your kids.
Your mom AND DAD had that responsibility.
I'm the PP whose kids need to swim midday. My Dad is dead. Many adults have just one parent.
Your dad is dead = “many” adults have just one parent?
Many people old enough to be bringing their own children to Thanksgiving don't have a mom and dad living together in one house. The idea that if someone says "when I visit my mom" they're sexist because they aren't talking about their Dad is absurd. Both DH and I lost a parent in adulthood, either before our kids were born (me) or when the kids were very small. Other people have parents who were always single, or who are divorced. There are lots of reasons why someone would post about their mom that aren't the fact that they're sexistly leaving their dad out of the conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP—you’re asking for “productive” advice. With the situation you’ve giving, it’s like asking for advice on how to stay cool while you’re in the middle of a burning building.
Instead of trying to do things that manage their behavior, focus on re-setting YOUR mindset and behaviors.
-Stay in a hotel
-Stop caring that they are grumbling. Be okay with just ignoring.
-Go out for your own meals.
-Bring your own food.
-Come up with a mantra to say to yourself when they start commenting on eating.
-Again, stay in a hotel.
-Even better, stop visiting. If they want to see you, they can visit you.
+1 for the bolded. You cannot change them, OP, you can only change yourself.
But also, don't let them shame kids for normal eating and if they do start to impose disordered eating on kids, visits are over. My aunt's comments about my (skinny) weight and eating as a teen (I was on cross country), did have an effect on me. I realize it was her own anorexia talking but the truth is my mom should have put a stop to it. Keep people like that away from your kids.
Your mom AND DAD had that responsibility.
I'm the PP whose kids need to swim midday. My Dad is dead. Many adults have just one parent.
Your dad is dead = “many” adults have just one parent?
Many people old enough to be bringing their own children to Thanksgiving don't have a mom and dad living together in one house. The idea that if someone says "when I visit my mom" they're sexist because they aren't talking about their Dad is absurd. Both DH and I lost a parent in adulthood, either before our kids were born (me) or when the kids were very small. Other people have parents who were always single, or who are divorced. There are lots of reasons why someone would post about their mom that aren't the fact that they're sexistly leaving their dad out of the conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP—you’re asking for “productive” advice. With the situation you’ve giving, it’s like asking for advice on how to stay cool while you’re in the middle of a burning building.
Instead of trying to do things that manage their behavior, focus on re-setting YOUR mindset and behaviors.
-Stay in a hotel
-Stop caring that they are grumbling. Be okay with just ignoring.
-Go out for your own meals.
-Bring your own food.
-Come up with a mantra to say to yourself when they start commenting on eating.
-Again, stay in a hotel.
-Even better, stop visiting. If they want to see you, they can visit you.
+1 for the bolded. You cannot change them, OP, you can only change yourself.
But also, don't let them shame kids for normal eating and if they do start to impose disordered eating on kids, visits are over. My aunt's comments about my (skinny) weight and eating as a teen (I was on cross country), did have an effect on me. I realize it was her own anorexia talking but the truth is my mom should have put a stop to it. Keep people like that away from your kids.
Your mom AND DAD had that responsibility.
I'm the PP whose kids need to swim midday. My Dad is dead. Many adults have just one parent.
Your dad is dead = “many” adults have just one parent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put my frigging foot down. No, Parent or in-law, my kids will not go hungry because you have become a lunatic.
You follow my rules when it comes to feeding my kids.
What is wrong with you people?
What you describe is not on the table anywhere in this post. OP has been adequately feeding her kids during these visits, "following her own rules." What is at issue in this thread is whether the stray negative comments that the ILs make about that fact is something she should try to police, or whether they are so bad as to necessitate spending money on a hotel room for these infrequent visits.
Op needs to speak up. That’s my point. Stop being polite and get it in the open.
Why are you such doormats?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP—you’re asking for “productive” advice. With the situation you’ve giving, it’s like asking for advice on how to stay cool while you’re in the middle of a burning building.
Instead of trying to do things that manage their behavior, focus on re-setting YOUR mindset and behaviors.
-Stay in a hotel
-Stop caring that they are grumbling. Be okay with just ignoring.
-Go out for your own meals.
-Bring your own food.
-Come up with a mantra to say to yourself when they start commenting on eating.
-Again, stay in a hotel.
-Even better, stop visiting. If they want to see you, they can visit you.
+1 for the bolded. You cannot change them, OP, you can only change yourself.
But also, don't let them shame kids for normal eating and if they do start to impose disordered eating on kids, visits are over. My aunt's comments about my (skinny) weight and eating as a teen (I was on cross country), did have an effect on me. I realize it was her own anorexia talking but the truth is my mom should have put a stop to it. Keep people like that away from your kids.
Your mom AND DAD had that responsibility.
I'm the PP whose kids need to swim midday. My Dad is dead. Many adults have just one parent.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing about this is a “typical story” and the fact that you are framing it that way suggests that you have normalized this in your own head to a dangerous extent.
Stay outside this home, do it for a short time, and serve your kids regular meals and snacks if they need them no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:I put my frigging foot down. No, Parent or in-law, my kids will not go hungry because you have become a lunatic.
You follow my rules when it comes to feeding my kids.
What is wrong with you people?
Anonymous wrote:What the What? How do you have a house without food? Especially if you want to have kids visiting?
And multiple people apparently do this?
My mom was big on healthy eating but there was always fruit and healthy snacks available and at thebjolidays of course there was plenty of food. It's the holidays.
Are they just imposing their eating disorder on everyone else?
Anonymous wrote:What the What? How do you have a house without food? Especially if you want to have kids visiting?
And multiple people apparently do this?
My mom was big on healthy eating but there was always fruit and healthy snacks available and at thebjolidays of course there was plenty of food. It's the holidays.
Are they just imposing their eating disorder on everyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put my frigging foot down. No, Parent or in-law, my kids will not go hungry because you have become a lunatic.
You follow my rules when it comes to feeding my kids.
What is wrong with you people?
What you describe is not on the table anywhere in this post. OP has been adequately feeding her kids during these visits, "following her own rules." What is at issue in this thread is whether the stray negative comments that the ILs make about that fact is something she should try to police, or whether they are so bad as to necessitate spending money on a hotel room for these infrequent visits.
Anonymous wrote:I put my frigging foot down. No, Parent or in-law, my kids will not go hungry because you have become a lunatic.
You follow my rules when it comes to feeding my kids.
What is wrong with you people?
Anonymous wrote:We’re about to go visit ILs for Thanksgiving, and it’s the typical story: there is no food in the house, they are weird about food, they hover/monitor/observe food preparation and consumption, they “close the kitchen,” etc.
We’ve tried sticking up for ourselves by bringing our own food and going out when we need to, and still they whine and grumble and criticize. I’m willing to ignore those antics, because at the end of the day, I’m not going to make myself or my kids uncomfortable, or teach my kids that it isn’t OK to eat three meals a day. (ILs only eat two meals a day and make a big production about how breakfast should be light because “it will be a big dinner,” and it’s not.) But I’d prefer not to hear grumbling, and wonder if anyone has managed to solve this problem without poking the bear. TIA for any productive advice!