'No, they are not at my beck and call'. or more politely,' No, they are busy. 'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three kids and I don’t recall any of my friends asking what the grandparents are doing to “help out.” How does this even come up in conversation?
My kids have never spent an overnight with either set of grandparents and it would never even occur to me to ask them to do such a thing. They are my and my spouse’s kids and we do the work to take care of them. Our parents raised us without expecting their parents to do their work for them and we have been doing the same.
My parents spent a good deal of time taking care of their elderly parents before they died, and my spouse and I will do the same for them when the time comes. They won’t have to do our work for us so that we will eventually take care of them.
OP here. An example:
Friend: Are you going to the PTO meeting tonight?
Me: No, A has soccer practice.
Friend: Can’t your inlaws take her?
Or BTSN or book club or whatever. Yes, I know I can get a sitter. Yes I know they don’t owe me $hit. But a lot of people I know do have this setup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three kids and I don’t recall any of my friends asking what the grandparents are doing to “help out.” How does this even come up in conversation?
My kids have never spent an overnight with either set of grandparents and it would never even occur to me to ask them to do such a thing. They are my and my spouse’s kids and we do the work to take care of them. Our parents raised us without expecting their parents to do their work for them and we have been doing the same.
My parents spent a good deal of time taking care of their elderly parents before they died, and my spouse and I will do the same for them when the time comes. They won’t have to do our work for us so that we will eventually take care of them.
OP here. An example:
Friend: Are you going to the PTO meeting tonight?
Me: No, A has soccer practice.
Friend: Can’t your inlaws take her?
Or BTSN or book club or whatever. Yes, I know I can get a sitter. Yes I know they don’t owe me $hit. But a lot of people I know do have this setup.
Anonymous wrote:I would tell the friends the grandparents aren't interested in lots of kid time, and while they care about the kids you get no help from them, and leave it at that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three kids and I don’t recall any of my friends asking what the grandparents are doing to “help out.” How does this even come up in conversation?
My kids have never spent an overnight with either set of grandparents and it would never even occur to me to ask them to do such a thing. They are my and my spouse’s kids and we do the work to take care of them. Our parents raised us without expecting their parents to do their work for them and we have been doing the same.
My parents spent a good deal of time taking care of their elderly parents before they died, and my spouse and I will do the same for them when the time comes. They won’t have to do our work for us so that we will eventually take care of them.
OP here. An example:
Friend: Are you going to the PTO meeting tonight?
Me: No, A has soccer practice.
Friend: Can’t your inlaws take her?
Or BTSN or book club or whatever. Yes, I know I can get a sitter. Yes I know they don’t owe me $hit. But a lot of people I know do have this setup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three kids and I don’t recall any of my friends asking what the grandparents are doing to “help out.” How does this even come up in conversation?
My kids have never spent an overnight with either set of grandparents and it would never even occur to me to ask them to do such a thing. They are my and my spouse’s kids and we do the work to take care of them. Our parents raised us without expecting their parents to do their work for them and we have been doing the same.
My parents spent a good deal of time taking care of their elderly parents before they died, and my spouse and I will do the same for them when the time comes. They won’t have to do our work for us so that we will eventually take care of them.
OP here. An example:
Friend: Are you going to the PTO meeting tonight?
Me: No, A has soccer practice.
Friend: Can’t your inlaws take her?
Or BTSN or book club or whatever. Yes, I know I can get a sitter. Yes I know they don’t owe me $hit. But a lot of people I know do have this setup.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. As I stated in the OP of course they don’t “owe” me, but most of my friends have 3+ kids and local grandparents help a ton, like driving to sports practices or keeping the younger while the older has an activity, etc. My friends all assume my inlaws are the same and they are not. How do I put an end to the questions without just saying “my inlaws don’t really help.”
My own mother (now deceased) lives in my hometown but would absolutely have been like my friends parents. Feel sorry for my kids - they got a dead grandma and a dud grandma. Some kids get two awesome grandmas. It’s sad.
Anonymous wrote:I will probably be this type of grandparent. We like our freedom and don't enjoy kids. We only like our kids.
Anonymous wrote:Equating time spent babysitting with their value as Grandparents is whack
Anonymous wrote:I have three kids and I don’t recall any of my friends asking what the grandparents are doing to “help out.” How does this even come up in conversation?
My kids have never spent an overnight with either set of grandparents and it would never even occur to me to ask them to do such a thing. They are my and my spouse’s kids and we do the work to take care of them. Our parents raised us without expecting their parents to do their work for them and we have been doing the same.
My parents spent a good deal of time taking care of their elderly parents before they died, and my spouse and I will do the same for them when the time comes. They won’t have to do our work for us so that we will eventually take care of them.