Anonymous wrote:Op here. I agree with PPs who say I probably am not awesome at navigating their tweenness.
I did collaborate with them in planning the weekend, both beforehand and during. Everything is optional. If one of them ever wanted to stay back at home, I always offered that.
Here was the plan we did for the weekend:
Thursday: they arrive in AM. Chill at home until evening. Then College walk (15 min), bookstore, and ordered grub hub delivered to campus and ate on picnic table on the mall
Friday: pioneer tour/gun show/horseback ride/ice cream and lunch at pioneer village. Also starbucks.
Saturday: I got day passes to a 5 star resort with lazy river/water slide/wave pool. We went there and also had lunch by the pool
Sunday: chilling and grilling day. We have a pool and they went swimming a lot. At sunset we went on a hike up a nearby mountain for approx 12 minutes before abandoning ship due to whining over walking.
Amazing!! My tweens would have LOVED that weekend. Good job1 I think when they get home they will rave about it. Some people just perpetually complain.
Today: the plan had been to go to an aviation museum (one niece wants to be a pilot. Ok actually she wants to be a flight attendant because she told me women can’t be pilotsso yeah I intend to dissuade her of that notion and tell her that SHE can be a pilot). But I’m sort of dreading it and thinking instead we go to effing Starbucks and they can spend the rest of the day sitting and watching tv since walking is apparently so painful for them.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I agree with PPs who say I probably am not awesome at navigating their tweenness.
I did collaborate with them in planning the weekend, both beforehand and during. Everything is optional. If one of them ever wanted to stay back at home, I always offered that.
Here was the plan we did for the weekend:
Thursday: they arrive in AM. Chill at home until evening. Then College walk (15 min), bookstore, and ordered grub hub delivered to campus and ate on picnic table on the mall
Friday: pioneer tour/gun show/horseback ride/ice cream and lunch at pioneer village. Also starbucks.
Saturday: I got day passes to a 5 star resort with lazy river/water slide/wave pool. We went there and also had lunch by the pool
Sunday: chilling and grilling day. We have a pool and they went swimming a lot. At sunset we went on a hike up a nearby mountain for approx 12 minutes before abandoning ship due to whining over walking.
Today: the plan had been to go to an aviation museum (one niece wants to be a pilot. Ok actually she wants to be a flight attendant because she told me women can’t be pilotsso yeah I intend to dissuade her of that notion and tell her that SHE can be a pilot). But I’m sort of dreading it and thinking instead we go to effing Starbucks and they can spend the rest of the day sitting and watching tv since walking is apparently so painful for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the visit was way too structured. The three in college Ts for a picture? That would not have gone over well. Buying those Ts would have been seen as a big waste of good money (that could have been spent at Starbucks).
The historic town might have been fun but a 5k fit bit walk? That would have involved shuffling the 3 of them around together for a long time. They were bored. It’s hard when you aren’t experienced with that age. Mine went to see child free auntie at that age.
Auntie forgot about jet lag and they were hungry the whole time. And uncle is the baby of the family ...
If I got to ship my tweens off to auntie for an entire weekend they would be under strict instructions to be polite, cooperate,help out and be polite, helpful and appreciative. You will eat what she gives you, appreciate what she plans for you say thank you and then also write a thank you note, Period.
so yeah I intend to dissuade her of that notion and tell her that SHE can be a pilot). But I’m sort of dreading it and thinking instead we go to effing Starbucks and they can spend the rest of the day sitting and watching tv since walking is apparently so painful for them. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s bratty and almost strange that they felt comfortable/empowered enough to do that to an aunt. Must be you are close? I can see my tween acting that way for DH and I but never an aunt.
Op here. They come From a working class background and DH and I are more upper middle class, and sometimes I wonder if that’s a factor. They seem to be very much in gimme mode whenever I’m with them, like they are CONSTANTLY trying to get things from me-starbucks, McDonald’s, clothes, etc.
I try to be generous and fair but it’s non stop. I took them to Starbucks yesterday, let them each get whatever they wanted....then today we walked by Starbucks a few times and each time asking to go in. It’s like it’s never enough, they always want more.
I would be effing mortified if my DS4 did this stuff.....
That is definitely the main factor. Next time, set limits as a pp mentioned, but it's easy to see how tweens would act in this situation.
Op here. So they just assume since we have more money than them that I should buy them whatever, whenever?
Most importantly, how do I prevent my own kids from turning out this way??????
Anonymous wrote:I think the visit was way too structured. The three in college Ts for a picture? That would not have gone over well. Buying those Ts would have been seen as a big waste of good money (that could have been spent at Starbucks).
The historic town might have been fun but a 5k fit bit walk? That would have involved shuffling the 3 of them around together for a long time. They were bored. It’s hard when you aren’t experienced with that age. Mine went to see child free auntie at that age.
Auntie forgot about jet lag and they were hungry the whole time. And uncle is the baby of the family ...
Anonymous wrote:Am I clueless?
Shipping in relatives from out of town
Babysitters in the house
Several activities that involve going inside
Going shopping (even if it was outside)
Is everyone doing this sort of thing in a pandemic?
Anonymous wrote:Mine would have loved sitting in starsucks and hanging around on their phone much of the day. And what a colossal waste of time that would have been. Good for you for trying to she them other possibilities in life. Smart phones are ruining the life of our tweens.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I am the only one who thinks they are behaving badly. They are each old enough to know better. I would be horrified if my kids behaved like that. I wonder if something else is going on? Did you invite the kids or did your sibling want the kids out of his house for the weekend? I don’t think their behavior is typical for kids who don’t spend a lot of time with you.