Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:tell your mom that all of you can't make it because they already have plans but that you can be there if she wants. and to next time give you more of a heads up. The 29th is a Thursday, so why couldn't his bday acknowledgement happen the previous weekend (is THIS weekend).
29th was a Monday, not Thursday.
But OP, why not your wife and kids go to her parents on Saturday. You go on Sunday to her parents' house, pick up the kids and head out to your parents'. 45 minutes is not that much of a drive. Even if it takes you an hour and a half, it isn't much of a drive when you do it just once a year.
Anonymous wrote:tell your mom that all of you can't make it because they already have plans but that you can be there if she wants. and to next time give you more of a heads up. The 29th is a Thursday, so why couldn't his bday acknowledgement happen the previous weekend (is THIS weekend).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wife here and a planner. Your wife knows your Dad’s Birthday and that you celebrate it annually. She deliberately made plans so she didn’t have to go and is trying to control the kids as well with the friend’s son. I simply would tell her she didn’t clear the plans with you so you’ll be taking the kids on Sunday morning/mid-afternoon to their Grandpa’s and her friend’s kid will simply have to be entertained by his mother and your wife. She can explain to her friend what happened. Then, have a conversation with your wife about not making assumptions regarding your schedule or your kids and to check with you.
I agree with this and I am a wife. Your wife knew what she was doing. She is angry that your mom does not give you much notice. She can either change her plans or let you take the kids.
No, why should she give up spending time with her kids just because her MIL has a potential weekend she likes to celebrate her husband's birthday but refuses to ever tell anyone?
No. If you want my kids and/or me to come. Then plan and INVITE us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of celebrating adult people's birthdays. Unless it's a big milestone, like 100. Why don't you just swap holidays between families, like normal people?
You all don’t celebrate your own parents’ birthdays? And they don’t celebrate yours?
I’m surprised at that. We don’t celebrate random people’s birthdays, but we do celebrate with our parents on their birthdays and they do the same for ours, if we are geographically close enough. I just can’t imagine not making an effort for the people who raised me and the people who raised my spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of celebrating adult people's birthdays. Unless it's a big milestone, like 100. Why don't you just swap holidays between families, like normal people?
You all don’t celebrate your own parents’ birthdays? And they don’t celebrate yours?
I’m surprised at that. We don’t celebrate random people’s birthdays, but we do celebrate with our parents on their birthdays and they do the same for ours, if we are geographically close enough. I just can’t imagine not making an effort for the people who raised me and the people who raised my spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wife here and a planner. Your wife knows your Dad’s Birthday and that you celebrate it annually. She deliberately made plans so she didn’t have to go and is trying to control the kids as well with the friend’s son. I simply would tell her she didn’t clear the plans with you so you’ll be taking the kids on Sunday morning/mid-afternoon to their Grandpa’s and her friend’s kid will simply have to be entertained by his mother and your wife. She can explain to her friend what happened. Then, have a conversation with your wife about not making assumptions regarding your schedule or your kids and to check with you.
I agree with this and I am a wife. Your wife knew what she was doing. She is angry that your mom does not give you much notice. She can either change her plans or let you take the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Wife here and a planner. Your wife knows your Dad’s Birthday and that you celebrate it annually. She deliberately made plans so she didn’t have to go and is trying to control the kids as well with the friend’s son. I simply would tell her she didn’t clear the plans with you so you’ll be taking the kids on Sunday morning/mid-afternoon to their Grandpa’s and her friend’s kid will simply have to be entertained by his mother and your wife. She can explain to her friend what happened. Then, have a conversation with your wife about not making assumptions regarding your schedule or your kids and to check with you.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of celebrating adult people's birthdays. Unless it's a big milestone, like 100. Why don't you just swap holidays between families, like normal people?
Anonymous wrote:If you had said "we always visit my family the last weekend in July but DW made plans" fine. That is on her.
But to come here and whine that you celebrate your dad's birthday sometime around the 29th but you never really know when because your mom never really tells you and expect your DW to just block off several weekends in the hopes your mom will eventually invite you guys and tell you the date? No way.
So, either have a standing weekend with your parents (whether it works for brother or not) and go visit with or without your brother or know that without better communication and solid plans your DW and kids will likely find something fun to do and that just needs to be OK.
No way would I expect my DH to block off weekends 'just in case' my family wants to invite us to a celebration they only seem to care if my sibling goes to. You have a narc family and victim mentality OP. Regular people INVITE others well in advance and don't demand and expect weekends be kept open to be notified at a moments notice someone expects you to visit them.