Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sense is you're resentful that you're funding her life and also funding her travels and she's choosing to spend them without you - Thanksgiving, winter break at bfs, vacation w bf. I get it but you can simply not fund these things. To some extent you can also say no. I get that doesn't work as they get older and have their own money but nothing wrong w saying WE expect to see you during the holidays + not funding her Thanksgiving and winter break w bf. You won't be able to stop her if she comes up w the money to go but at least it won't be this lingering resentment of - we pay all this $ and don't even get to see you for holidays, so now you owe us this trip to great uncle.
I agree with this.
And you really have got to drop trying to drag another adult to visit great uncle whoever. This is the time to start transitioning toward a parent to adult child relationship. Respect boundaries, don’t force your desires on others instead find common ground where you enjoy each others company. The days of forcing kids to visit aunt Ida are over. I guarantee you that very soon when she is a young working adult, she is not going to burn all her PTO and budget flying somewhere for cousin Wilma’s wedding. She isn’t going to great Uncle Hubert’s funeral in Nebraska. You need to start getting over this now.
Holy hell! She also WILL be spending her PTO and budget to go visit her boyfriend and whatever she chooses, and not the parents paying (god I hope not). The parents ARE paying now, so a little respect and honoring their wishes at this time is absolutely not too much to ask for.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think you should be making a college student spend Friday night, or any night, taking a train to see an uncle.
You should have gone to the game, spent some time with her after - maybe an hour or so - and then let her do what she wanted on her Friday night. And then you go on train to see uncle, take train back, see her for a late brunch, then fly back.
She should be focused on classes and friends and sports. You should not be taking her away from that.
I don't know why you'd pay for her to go on vacation with someone else's family. Maybe a plane ticket as a Christmas gift but nothing else. If his family is making her pay for anything other than her own plane ticket they suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is spoiled and rude.
+1000. My mum would have slapped me across the face.
Well that would be bizarre and abusive
Rich coddled brats grow up to be a-hole college kids because they were never spanked or slapped when mouthy. They in turn walk all over their pushover parents. One good slap in their teens by a mom would fix such disrespect.Anonymous wrote:Is this just typical 'soiling the nest' talk you'd let it slide or would this really hurt you?
Flew across the country to DD's college to see her last sporting event of the season. Asked her in advance to spend Friday night through Saturday morning with me for dinner and to visit elderly family member (my uncle) via train. Things were going well, then after a slightly sarcastic comment, DD snapped, "You're lucky I'm here. I'm a college student. I'm giving up my Friday night to do this with you."
If it's relevant, we pay for her room, board, tuition, all of her bills, car when home, all of her flights including a flight to spend with her boyfriend over Thanksgiving break instead of your family, which she told me about a few hours the above scolding. She's a very strong student-athlete, had a summer internship last summer and already has one for summer 2026.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sense is you're resentful that you're funding her life and also funding her travels and she's choosing to spend them without you - Thanksgiving, winter break at bfs, vacation w bf. I get it but you can simply not fund these things. To some extent you can also say no. I get that doesn't work as they get older and have their own money but nothing wrong w saying WE expect to see you during the holidays + not funding her Thanksgiving and winter break w bf. You won't be able to stop her if she comes up w the money to go but at least it won't be this lingering resentment of - we pay all this $ and don't even get to see you for holidays, so now you owe us this trip to great uncle.
I agree with this.
And you really have got to drop trying to drag another adult to visit great uncle whoever. This is the time to start transitioning toward a parent to adult child relationship. Respect boundaries, don’t force your desires on others instead find common ground where you enjoy each others company. The days of forcing kids to visit aunt Ida are over. I guarantee you that very soon when she is a young working adult, she is not going to burn all her PTO and budget flying somewhere for cousin Wilma’s wedding. She isn’t going to great Uncle Hubert’s funeral in Nebraska. You need to start getting over this now.
Anonymous wrote:My sense is you're resentful that you're funding her life and also funding her travels and she's choosing to spend them without you - Thanksgiving, winter break at bfs, vacation w bf. I get it but you can simply not fund these things. To some extent you can also say no. I get that doesn't work as they get older and have their own money but nothing wrong w saying WE expect to see you during the holidays + not funding her Thanksgiving and winter break w bf. You won't be able to stop her if she comes up w the money to go but at least it won't be this lingering resentment of - we pay all this $ and don't even get to see you for holidays, so now you owe us this trip to great uncle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this just typical 'soiling the nest' talk you'd let it slide or would this really hurt you?
Flew across the country to DD's college to see her last sporting event of the season. Asked her in advance to spend Friday night through Saturday morning with me for dinner and to visit elderly family member (my uncle) via train. Things were going well, then after a slightly sarcastic comment, DD snapped, "You're lucky I'm here. I'm a college student. I'm giving up my Friday night to do this with you."
If it's relevant, we pay for her room, board, tuition, all of her bills, car when home, all of her flights including a flight to spend with her boyfriend over Thanksgiving break instead of your family, which she told me about a few hours the above scolding. She's a very strong student-athlete, had a summer internship last summer and already has one for summer 2026.
I would snap back with, “You’re lucky I paid for your flight to see [boyfriend]. I could take it back if I wanted to.”
yeah that will really help the relationship.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this just typical 'soiling the nest' talk you'd let it slide or would this really hurt you?
Flew across the country to DD's college to see her last sporting event of the season. Asked her in advance to spend Friday night through Saturday morning with me for dinner and to visit elderly family member (my uncle) via train. Things were going well, then after a slightly sarcastic comment, DD snapped, "You're lucky I'm here. I'm a college student. I'm giving up my Friday night to do this with you."
If it's relevant, we pay for her room, board, tuition, all of her bills, car when home, all of her flights including a flight to spend with her boyfriend over Thanksgiving break instead of your family, which she told me about a few hours the above scolding. She's a very strong student-athlete, had a summer internship last summer and already has one for summer 2026.
I would snap back with, “You’re lucky I paid for your flight to see [boyfriend]. I could take it back if I wanted to.”
Anonymous wrote:Is this just typical 'soiling the nest' talk you'd let it slide or would this really hurt you?
Flew across the country to DD's college to see her last sporting event of the season. Asked her in advance to spend Friday night through Saturday morning with me for dinner and to visit elderly family member (my uncle) via train. Things were going well, then after a slightly sarcastic comment, DD snapped, "You're lucky I'm here. I'm a college student. I'm giving up my Friday night to do this with you."
If it's relevant, we pay for her room, board, tuition, all of her bills, car when home, all of her flights including a flight to spend with her boyfriend over Thanksgiving break instead of your family, which she told me about a few hours the above scolding. She's a very strong student-athlete, had a summer internship last summer and already has one for summer 2026.