T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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928.1 | "She has my chin, my dimples, my..." | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Tue May 28 1991 13:57 | 25 |
| Gee, some of this sounds familiar. My mother-in-law links all traits
to her family, even when I have some of the same traits. I try to make
jokes and say something like, "Do you think that I, as the mother, had
some input into her?"
That type of thing is minor. Some of your other comments have me
concerned. I wouldn't allow anyone to plan an overnight visit without
consulting me. *I'm* the mother, not them, and I expect that.
I think you should talk to your husband about this, and make him
understand where you are coming from. Then the two of you need to have
a united front with his parents.
But do keep in mind that they are the grandparents and they *love* your
child and have her interest in mind.
Lastly, one of my tricks when I wanted time alone with my baby was that
I nursed her. If you are nursing, this is the perfect way to go to
another room without hurting anyone's feelings. The baby has to eat,
after all.
Good luck! New generations make whole new rules in family
relationships.
judy
|
928.2 | mine isn't the first grandchild | USEM::ANDREWS | | Tue May 28 1991 14:01 | 11 |
| Sandie,
Unfortunately, I have no advice for you. But I do have lots of
sympathy. This sounds very much like the situation I have, too.
If anyone has any advice, I would like to hear it too.
Thanks,
Lauren
P.S. this is not the first grandchild.
|
928.3 | Talk w/ Spouse First | STOKES::PACHECO | RON | Tue May 28 1991 14:07 | 35 |
| I'm presently in a similar predicament, but think that I've worked
it out. My mother-in-law, who I adore and think is a wonderful
person with a great sense of humor has been with us since Courtney
came home from the hospital tow weeks ago. She too has become overly
infatuated and "ignorant" of my desires in that she wouldn't let
me spend time alone with my little girl when I get home. I too,
tried to be blunt about it and she just laughed at me as if I was
just kidding. (I usually kid with her a lot so I could almost
understand how she could've misunderstood.) What I did was have
a series of small converstions with my wife Patty about the subject.
I needed to have several converstions with Patty because I didn't
want her getting upset with me "dictating" what her mother did and
didn't do.
I convinced Patty to let her mother know that Courtney is our child
first(!) and then related to everone else. Patty was then able
to talk sensibly to her mother about my feelings and that as the
father I deserved some special time with my newborn. (After all,
they're home with her all day to enjoy her while I'm at work thinking
about her, looking at her pictures, etc.) The other point that
Patty was able to gently get across to her mother is that we want
to raise *our* child in a manner that we see fit, right or wrong!
After all, that's part of being a parent- making mistakes. (My
philosphy is that our parents had their turn at making mistakes
and now is our turn.) I'm not trying to sound like I'm harsh on
my m-i-law or my parents, but this is what parenting is all about,
and we're all adults who need to be respected as much as we respect
others.
Sorry for the rambling, I guess I needed to vent just a bit more.
Try to discuss this with your partner first and make sure they
understand your feelings first and have them play the arbitrator
with their parents. So far, its workng for me!
Ron
|
928.4 | A first from an only | STOKES::PACHECO | RON | Tue May 28 1991 14:09 | 4 |
| Sorry that I forgot to mention that this is my mother-in-law's first
grandchild, complicated by the fact my wife is her only child.
Ron
|
928.5 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue May 28 1991 14:49 | 27 |
|
Ah, and we expect this very same behavior from Marc's parents. Already,
they are *telling* us to take vacations so that they can take care of
the baby. (my response to that is, we're having children because we
want them, why on earth would we be going on vacation without them?)
Thankfully, these people live seven hours away and trips back and forth
number only a few each year. We do have to handle the visit after the
baby is born which is already causing a few anxieties, we've decided to
have them hold off on visiting until at least the second week. As a
previous noter stated, we are the parents and we want to figure out how
to do things, we do not want to be told what is right and what is
wrong. We figure that we will spend the first week alone getting used
tot he new baby and *then* we will be willing to have them visit.
(visions of my mother-in-law taking the baby and allowing me 5 minute
visitation rights on the hour do haunt me and justifiably so, she has a
history of already obsessing about this first grandchild).
Funny thing is that my parents are causing no great concern, this will
be their 10th grandchild and they have already made it clear that they
do not intend to come up from North Carolina to visit.
I think that the main thing to remember is that you are the mother
(parents) and you have a right to confront unacceptable behavior and
to say no.
Wendy
|
928.6 | I've sort of been there | GOLF::TRIPPL | | Tue May 28 1991 14:51 | 20 |
| Boy can I relate to this one, in a different sort of way. We were
living with my inlaws when AJ was born. Everynight my mother inlaw
would come up to our room and check to be sure AJ had a tshirt under
his nightsack, wrapped in a recieving blanket "her way of wrapping",
and placed in his crib under at least one blanket, with the house heat
set at what we called "nursing home" level (extremely hot like 80)
In AJ's 4+years I've endured the baby pictures of my husband telling me
how much he looks like my husband's baby pictures, excuse me, he looks
like ME too! and how whatever he does it because "his father did that
too!". So what am I chopped liver?
I think 11 weeks is a bit young, but AJ is over 4, and no one *ever*
has taken him overnight. I'd give my right arm about now to sleep
pasat 6:15 in the morning!! If you feel your baby will be OK away for
an overnight, I'd say do it! If your gut says otherwise then wait til
the baby is older.
Hang tough!
Lyn
|
928.7 | | GEMVAX::SANTOS | | Tue May 28 1991 14:57 | 16 |
| I dont think that anyone is alone in this kind of situation.
I know we went through it and are still going threw it and Andrew is
two years old. They want to take him on their summer vacation which is
two weeks (no way to long). My feelings about overnight stays is
that you work all day the only time that you get to have quality time
with your child is in the evening and on week ends. If they want to
see their grand child make it durning the day when you are working.
then they get to have all day with them and do everything with them
feed them change them etc.
That is what we have done and it has worked out just fine.
Some times you just have to say no not to night we have a family evening
planned with your new family.
Della
|
928.8 | some mistakes I've made | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Tue May 28 1991 15:16 | 48 |
| It's terribly easy to make the baby a pawn in a relationship
struggle -- with spouse, with parents, with siblings, with the
sitter. I know; I did it with my firstborn and my parents.
One thing that will help is if you can sit down with yourself and
see if you can separate your real concerns for the baby's
well-being from emotional issues of who's in control. You don't
have to tell us if you're worried about the baby's health and
well-being or you're jealous of all the attention the baby's
getting while you feel neglected yourself, but until you know what
you're really feeling, it's easy to escalate little disagreements
into major fights that increase hurt feelings without getting you
any closer to the real issues.
You might simply be having differing assumptions about what being
a family means. If you're only living an hour from your husband's
parents, they (and he) might have visions of big noisy extended-
family gatherings while you're looking at private evenings with
just the kids. Both are legitimate, but it's important to know
what you want and then to talk to your husband and your in-laws
about those differing expectations.
I found that I was terribly jealous of Steven after he was born.
He was Neil's firstborn and they were absorbed in each other. I
felt excluded by their closeness, and like nobody took me
seriously, that my opinion of how things should be done didn't
matter. And I found it was partly because I wasn't taking myself
seriously. I was making myself into an emotional doormat and then
wondering why everybody in the family walked on me. I thought
that it reflected poorly on me as a mother that the baby should be
closer to his father than to me.
I eventually learned that the children's relationships to other
people -- to their father, to their grandparents, to each other,
to their friends -- don't threaten their relation to me. In fact,
their ability to develop other friendships both inside and outside
the fmaily is probably partly a reflection of the relationship
they have with me. After that it became a lot easier to deal with
Steven preferring Neil, and with infringements on what I saw as
"my" territory.
Post-partum depression was also a part of it. It can start as
late as 10-12 months after the baby is born, when you think you're
recovering perfectly, and it can last for years. That made coping
with real issues so much more difficult, but once I was aware of
it, I could at least cope.
--bonnie
|
928.9 | the reverse almost | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Tue May 28 1991 16:50 | 16 |
| Well I guess with me it is rather different. First I didn't have
a lot of interference from either set of parents when my kids
were babies. They all lived too far away.
But with my granddaughter, it is almost like my son and her mother
are over joyed to let me take her for a day or over night. This may
well be because they are both college students in their senior
year and they are so incredibly stressed out that they need the
occasional break.
I love having my granddaughter around very much, but don't like having
total responsiblity for long periods of time. Fortunately with
2 aunts and uncle and a grandfather around most of the time this
is not a problem.
Bonnie
|
928.10 | The grass is always greener over the septic tank | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue May 28 1991 17:15 | 14 |
| Let me say first that I have sympathy for the basenoter. And envy.
My son is 3 and my dad has never seen him. I invited him to come
up for James' christening and Dad said "it takes too much gas to
drive up." He's never said, "I'd like to see him," or anything
like that. His wife has already told one of my other sisters that
"We won't be visiting New England; it's too long of a drive and it's
too hard on your dad." Mind you, they spend four months of the year
in Florida. And they don't fly down there. FWIW, they live in
Pittsburgh, which is a 12-hour drive or a 90-minute flight.
So, .0, I wish you lots of good luck....in a sense, I almost wish
I had your problem.
|
928.11 | Just tell them whose baby it is | USAT02::HERNDONK | | Tue May 28 1991 17:51 | 32 |
| Sandie,
I don't envy you...my in-laws are possessive, now, *before*
our baby is born...they live 1 1/2 hrs away and seem to
think we should be over there every weekend....both my
husband and I are very independent. He was *single* in
the military for 8 years and I moved away from my family
5 years ago. So we are used to not having family around.
We are often *fed guilt trips* to try to get us to see
them....I dread it when the baby comes.
I will definately remind my mother-in-law that she has
*ALREADY* raised her children and I will raise mine
(and make mistakes) on my own.
Maybe you should remind yours that they already had their
chance and you want yours....Maybe even show them your note.
It was nicely written....
Maybe they will take you more seriously....
I think babies change people and sometimes you just need
to set the ground rules up front....They may/may not hurt
people's feelings but this is *your* time with your baby
and that's more important isn't it? Your in-laws will
get over it...and if not, ask them how they would feel
if they were in *your* shoes? I think grandparents
forget that *selfish* love in the beginning a mom
has for her baby...
Good luck, Kristen
|
928.12 | | USOPS::GALLANT | ah, ah, ah, ah | Thu May 30 1991 13:22 | 38 |
|
Hmmmm... Well, FWIW, here's my two cents.
This is my mother's first grandchild from her only daughter.
If she had her way, she'd spend every waking (and sleeping!)
moment with her. It's been a long time since she's had
the opportunity. Even relatives have been scarce on the
baby scene lately.
While I was out on maternity leave, she'd come over every day
for lunch. She worked about 10 minutes away and it made a nice
break for me (I could shower, go check the mail, etc.) while
she watched Cassidy. She also knew that once I went back to
work that the visits wouldn't be as frequent so I let her
change her, feed her, etc. My feelings were Hey! Knock
yourself out and have a good time .. I'll be doing this every
day for the next few years.
As far as overnights.. Cassidy is 10 weeks old and has already
stayed at Memere's twice. She's a very good baby and doesn't
give a lot of hassle. My mother raised my brother and I
just fine so I trust her. She may do some things differently
than I would but at that age, I'm not too concerned with it
affecting the baby.
And if she does things that aren't quite "right" such as
giving her too many ounces of formual at a time or putting
three blankets on her when it's 85 outside I just give her
a little prod and remind her that it's been a LONG time
she's had her own and times have changed...
Maybe I sound selfish but I need time to myself (it's
nice to sleep in until 11:00 when she's not there!) otherwise
I'd run myself ragged. I know it's not quite relevant
to your situation, but...
/Kim
|
928.13 | Sleep late? | THOTH::CUNNINGHAM | | Thu May 30 1991 14:26 | 22 |
|
Kim...
You seem to have the same attitude that I am hoping to have with
my unborn child when he/she arrives. This will be my parents first
grandchild, and I am hoping they will want to take the baby over
night etc once a month or so, and if so...I am going to accept
gladly. I trust them, and my fathers wife does daycare herslf and
loves infants...so I don't think I'll have to worry about the
babys care. My mom is already going out and picking up things
like an extra carier/seat, porta crib etc..to keep at her house
for when the baby "comes over". I'm hoping I don't get TOO
over protective..
After 9 months of pregnancy (10 mos)..I think I'm going to be DUE
for a night or 2 out with my husband alone (as much as I will love
my child)... and will welcome a chance to "sleep late".
but I can also see the other extreme as far as the grandparents
being TOO overpowering also... I guess I'll just have to wait and see.
Chris
|
928.14 | Be thankful of your in-laws | BIRDY::SAUDELLI | | Fri May 31 1991 11:11 | 30 |
| I believe that Grandparents are an extremely important part of a childs
development. I was extremely close to my grandmother(lived in the same
town) as a child. My other grandmother lived across the country and
there was not the same closeness/bonding that developed.
As a new parent you feel that they are intruding on your time right
now but that will pass. In a couple of years you will appreciate it if
your inlaws pay as much attention to your child/children as they do
now.
I believe that if you stay home all day with your children you relish
the opportunity to let your inlaws/parents spend as much time as they
can with your kids. If you work during the day it is a different
situation.
Your parents/inlaws are not going to live forever. If they love your
children and ENJOY spending time with them, let them. You could be in
a situation as some of the previous noters had stated where they would
gladly trade situations with you.
Your child is very young now but as she/he grows up the demand as a
parent increases. You will look back and appreciate that you had
caring loving inlaws who WANT TO BE WITH THIER GRANDCHILDREN. Plus your
kids will be better off by the bonding that occurs with GRAMMA and
GRAMPA.
Randy................Whos own mother could care less but has the
GREATEST INLAWS/GRANDPARENTS to my children.
|
928.15 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Fri May 31 1991 11:17 | 6 |
|
Kind and loving grandparents are one thing.
Overpowering and intrusive grandparents are quite another.
Wendy
|
928.16 | | USOPS::GALLANT | got l-u-s-t on my mind.. | Fri May 31 1991 11:26 | 24 |
| RE: .15
I don't think anyone is arguing with you about the fact
that you've got a problem situation on your hands. I
think they're just trying to see both sides. I'm lucky
enough not to have that overpowering sense with either
set of grandparents. Would you or could you imagine
the overpowering grandparents not being involved in
your child's life at all?
RE: Saudelli
>I believe that if you stay home all day with your children you relish
>the opportunity to let your inlaws/parents spend as much time as they
>can with your kids. If you work during the day it is a different
>situation.
Eek... I went back to work six weeks after my daughter was
born and I'm still more than happy to let my Mom take her
for a night. I do get out of work at 3:30 every day, though,
so I still have ample time with her unlike some folks who
don't get home until 6:00, etc.
/Kim
|
928.17 | Different situation | AIMHI::MAZIALNIK | | Fri May 31 1991 12:21 | 13 |
| I hear what Wendy is saying in .15, though. To me .14 was talking
about a totally different situation. I have a friend whose
mother-in-law is obsessed with the first grandchild. The situation
is very much like the problem in .0 and it's horrible.
You can also have the problem of grandparents who are kind and loving,
not obsessed, BUT will tell you how everything you're doing is wrong.
I'm very hopeful that with my second, everyone won't be telling me
"baby needs a hat, baby needs socks, baby needs sweater, baby should
be eating solids". At least this time around I'll have the confidence
to tell them to get off my back (but not in those words, of course).
Donna
|
928.18 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Fri May 31 1991 12:30 | 27 |
| re.16
Could I imagine the overpowering grandparents *not* being involved?
Absolutely.
But I also realize that I have a very, very different situation.
And I also realize that thanks to some pretty tough experiences and
guidance, I can say that. To me, blood ties do not justify
inappropriate behavior.
As an example, one of my siblings is an active, violent alcoholic.
I have no intentions of initiating involvement with him and our child.
If he is at a family function, then with supervision, he would meet our
child, but I would never intentionally put the child in a situation
where it might be harmed either physically or emotionally.
I understand what you are saying about caring grandparents, I
really do, and for those of you who have them I am truly envious. I
read about the kind of support that you get and I think how wonderful
it would be to have that both for myself and for the child.
But for those of us that do not fall into that category, wishing it
could be like that and ignoring what *is* to pursue what *could* be, is
a very dangerous game to play with anyone.
Wendy
|
928.19 | what I think | WORDS::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Fri May 31 1991 13:42 | 16 |
| Time for some honest communications? Don't lightheartenly talk about
what you are feeling,
discuss your true feelings, "I don't like it when you...., it makes me
feel .....". Don't make it a game, don't laugh. You might even cut
out the .0 you wrote and give it to them if you feel you can't
communicate it any other way.
There are other [normal] issues at work here where you feel the need to
assert that you are in control. Try not be get into a power struggle.
Enjoy having someone to give you time off. When it comes time to
differ with some point of upbringing .i.e length of hair was one issue
my inlaws and we differed on, simply state what how something is going
to be done and don't enter into a debate over it. That'll show them
that your all grown up and can make the right decision.
ed
|
928.20 | "the following is/is not a question, Mom!" | MURPHY::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri May 31 1991 15:42 | 14 |
| I finally isolated what was a fairly minor communications problem with
my mom but which was gave me a lot of angst! I realized that when I
tried to recount an anecdote about the baby, Mom would immediately
provide *the solution*, even before I got to the end of the story.
What I wanted was an audience, not an *answer*! Mom wouldn't let me
get to the denoument--whether it was the incredibly inept way I'd
handled it or the unbelievably ingenious solution that presented
itself; whether I'd narrowed it down to a few dozen possible courses of
action or decided to ignore the situation. I finally said "Mom, that
was NOT a QUESTION! I just wanted to chat!" She was a little stung at
first but we eventually agreed that I'd make it clear which was a
question and which was a request for commiseration/applause....
Leslie
|
928.21 | This has got to take the cake | SCAACT::COX | Dallas ACT Data Ctr Mgr | Mon Jun 03 1991 14:06 | 20 |
| I was in the beauty salon the other day and my stylist was a vietnamese
woman whose husband is also vietnamese. We got to talking about kids (imagine
that) and I asked how many she had. She said she had four (25, 23, 19, 14),
and three lived with her). I learned that the oldest was in France with his
grandmother.
After asking a few questions, I learned that the grandmother took him
immediately when he was born, then later moved to France with him. He came
back to visit his mother when he was four, and again when he was six. Other
than that he has been with his grandmother (paternal) all his life.
I mentioned that I could NEVER do that with any of my children, and was curious
as to how come she did it, and how she handled it. She said that she did NOT
want to, nor did her husband. But that the m-i-l was VERY insistent on raising
him, and her husband thought it best to give him to his mother and have a new
baby, than cause family problems!
Is it that different in Vietnam, or is this a unique situation? I was appalled!
Kristen
|
928.22 | Sounds strange, but may have some logic... | CYCLPS::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Mon Jun 03 1991 14:43 | 2 |
| Well, another factor might be that the child was born in/around 1966.
Not the best of times to be a boy growing up in Vietnam...
|
928.23 | Different places, different customs | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Tue Jun 04 1991 04:06 | 8 |
| In many oriental societies, the eldest parents rule the roost. The daughter-in-
law who probably lives with her husband's family is low man on the totem pole,
even lower than her sons, when they are born. This is particularly true in
rural societies.
But this is their culture and they have lived like this for thousands of years.
ccb
|
928.24 | Common | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Tue Jun 04 1991 10:31 | 7 |
| I believe this is not uncommon in Southeast Asia, as Cheryl described
in .23. I met a family in the same situation in Thailand. Grandma
lived several hours away (by bus) from the parents. I don't know how
they could cope emotionally. I believe it is done frequently with the
first son.
Laura
|
928.25 | It is not as heartless as it seems | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Tue Jun 04 1991 10:58 | 19 |
| The social structure in these countries has evolved in such a way that a
young married women is an "apprentice". She has a complete supporting
family to help her and guide her in what is "correct" in child raising, keeping
a house, etc. For this she works very hard. She will have her chance when she
is grandma.
In return, grandparents have a true "job" in these societies. They are highly
honored. They have main responsibility for child rearing, a task they are more
physically able to accomplish than the hard work of cooking, cleaning, etc.
They are well looked after and supported by their children till they die.
Who is to say that this is less humane then packing them off to a home? And
when this is the norm, I don't believe that it is emotionally stressful. The
strain comes when you try to mix cultures whether through marrying into a
different culture or through living in a different culture. Then the values
you have learned since birth begin to be questioned or you don't have the
backup/environment to know what to do.
Cheryl
|
928.26 | has happened in my family | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Tue Jun 04 1991 12:17 | 13 |
| Even in rural European cultures, it's common for the family to
make a collective "sacrifice" of a firstborn or talented child in
order to help the child fulfill his or her potential and to try to
better the family's collective position -- for instance, going
into debt to finance a college education, sending the child to a
richer relative to live, sending an especially talented child away
to a special school, and so on.
The family misses the child, certainly, but the feeling is that
it's better for everyone in the long run, and you're sacrificing
parental feelings for the good of the child.
--bonnie
|
928.27 | I've seen it | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Tue Jun 04 1991 16:17 | 9 |
| Since we're on this tangent...
An ex boyfriend of mine had many relatives in Paris. Upon visiting
them once I learned that an aunt of his had given her third child to
her sister because her sister could not have children. The aunt then
went on to have three more children. So it does happen, not all that
uncommon, but it would be very difficult for me to do.
|
928.28 | But Mom - They're not yours, they're MINE!!! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Sun Jun 09 1991 17:55 | 62 |
| I haven't read all the replies to this note .... but the basenote sure
rings a bell (more like a Gong!). My mother is extremely possesive
about my children. My mother-in-law barely acknowleges that they're
alive. Weird.
At first, we were thankful that the boys and my mom would develop a
good 'grandparent/child' relationship. But the more she saw of them,
the more obsessive she became. It was also a little more difficult
because my husband was happy to have the time without them (just the 2
of us), so he was more willing to put up with her behavior. The fact
that she still treats me like a 'little girl' doesn't help much either,
but that's another story...
Anyway, this all came to a head about 3 years ago, when Christopher
(then 3) was visiting her. She was supposed to have brought him home
by 7:00. By 8:00, I hadn't heard a word and they weren't here, so I
called. The response on the other end was infuriating to say the
least. I asked if she wanted me to get him (she lives an hour from us),
or when she was bringing him home. She said that they (they=her!) had
decided that it would be much better that he just spent the night
there again, and that he wasn't coming home. Aside from the fact that
this was completely out of the question because of other plans and
needing enough time to de-program him from being with her, she had
absolutely *NO* intentions whatsoever of letting me know (forget about
asking!). She said I didn't need to know - he was fine. ARGH!!!!!!!
And then she hung up on me. I called back and (Thank God!) Christopher
answered the phone and I just told him I was coming to get him.
To make matters much much worse, by the time I got there, she had told
him that I was coming to get him because I didn't like her and thought
that she was abusing him, and that sometimes I can just be mean and
don't understand. She also made out that she was afraid that I was
going to hit her or something (which I've **NEVER** done!!), and called
my father (whom she hates), and told him he had to come over to protect
her. (ok, so the lady's tapped!)
Obviously, things went downhill from there. Bringing him into the
middle of it was *WAY* over the line. After that, and until this year,
she was forbidden to have them stay over or see them alone. It has
definitely affected everyone's relationships, and all for the worst
A few times she arranged for one of my sisters to watch them, and then
she would send them out and watch them herself ... which affected my
relationship with my sisters as well.
Soooo .... I would suggest that you at least be careful that this
doesn't get out of hand. My kids don't go anywhere unless I say it's
ok, and I know exactly what's going on. I always call to say
goodnight, and I be sure to ask THEM what's going on instead of
listening to the line of dribble that they're told to repeat from the
other end of the phone.
I'm sure that this all arose from the fact that my mother has never
been able to accept the fact that we are grown, and is completely
obsessed with small children. If she had her way - and she's quite
open about this - she would just take the kids away so that she could
raise them 'properly'. A previous noter said "They had they're chance
to make mistakes - now it's mine" MOST Definitely!! Mom turned out 5
kids -- all with fairly significant problems .... she's not getting her
hands on my two! (-:
*GOOD LUCK* ... hopefully you can nip this in the bud!
Patty
|
928.29 | | R2ME2::ROLLMAN | | Tue Jun 11 1991 10:45 | 22 |
|
Geez, I don't know how you can live with things like that. You can't trust
your own mother! It breaks my heart.
I'm extremely lucky - my mother is wonderful. She was so
supportive thru the entire pregnancy (ok, ok, she had a little trouble with my
decision to use a midwife, but she got over it when I explained I would be
having the baby in the exact same hospital as if I was using a doctor).
Then she came *5* times last winter to help me. She taught me a lot about how
to be a mother, but was and is very clear that *I'm* the mommy and so whatever
I decide is what happens. If I don't know what to do, she'll help me decide,
but *I* have to make the decision.
It wasn't always like that, but sometime in the last 10 years, we started
being honest with each other. I wish I could say, just do that and it will
all work out with the parents and parents-in-law troubles, but it takes
committment and respect on both sides for it to happen.
I thought I appreciated my mother before, but after reading this topic, I don't
appreciate her enough....
|
928.30 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Mon Jul 22 1991 17:46 | 50 |
|
Boy, we just had a visit from the in-laws from hell and it was
terrible. It pretty much confirmed everything that we had feared and
more. At the time many of these things were said I was so shocked that
I couldn't come up with legitimate responses (not that they would have
heard them anyway).
The grandparents have arranged to have the baby (due mid-September)
transported out to their house for a week (alone) sometime in the fall
so that they can take care of it and get to know it. (over my dead
body).
Whenever they referred to the baby they called it our (not your as
in you and your husband's) baby. A few times, the mother slipped and
called the baby "my baby" (she has made it clear that she wants to own
this baby and is very upset that I am the one that is pregnant and not
her, every time I would mention a symptom of pregnancy she would say
that she had it worse *right* now and knew exactly what I felt like,
she even wants to own the pregnancy for God's sake).
They were disappointed to hear that it was a boy (girls have such
nicer outfits).
They intend on "spoiling the baby" which reads that if they give
the baby enough, the baby will like them better than us.
They brought their new puppy to our house (without asking us first)
and thought that it was "so cute" when the puppy shit and peed on our
living room rug. They are letting the puppy be around children so that
it will be good when it comes time to let it play with "our" baby.
The mother thought that "mama" or "mommy" would be a cuter name for
her instead of "grandma".
How do you set boundaries with people who are so removed from
reality? We tried to respond to a few of these comments but we were
caught so far off guard.
I'm afraid that we are all in for lots and lots of battles over the
ownership and parenting of Marc and my baby.
Wendy
|
928.31 | Straighten them now, don't wait | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Jul 22 1991 17:50 | 6 |
| They aren't in-laws to both of you. Get the spouse to tell them to
back off.
I'd seriously consider not letting them have the child in September.
-John Bishop
|
928.32 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Mon Jul 22 1991 18:06 | 27 |
|
Just as a clarification, there is no way in hell that those people
are taking any child of mine for a week before that child is at *least*
21 years of age (and has a car so that he could leave on his own
accord). I say this partly in jest and partly as the law.
The point of that story was that the in-laws made the arrangements
on their own without consulting us (why would we matter, we are only
the parents - they see us as merely being a nuisance on the way to
their baby), in fact, they didn't want us to even be there, the plan
was to take only the baby out (8 hour drive one way) to take care of it
after it was a few weeks old. (yeah what are we supposed to do in the
meantime, rent a lot of videos?) The fact that I would be breastfeeding
was not even a concern in their plans (she stopped breast feeding after
a few weeks, I could also). I was just aghast that they would even
assume that we would go along with this, but again, they really feel
that they own this baby and that they will do the parenting.
I seriously don't think that these people have any basis in reality
and if they were trying to show us how much they wanted to care for hte
baby they failed miserably. We just want to keep them as far away as we
can from any of our children.
It truly was frightening to see their attitude towards this baby.
Wendy
|
928.33 | Be tough | KAHALA::JOHNSON_L | Leslie Ann Johnson | Mon Jul 22 1991 18:23 | 29 |
| Too bad you can't further away so that it would take a 70 hours
or something like that to drive the distance. Of course even if that
could be a reality rather than wishful thinking they'd probably plan
on flying :-{.
It sounds like you and your husband, are going to have to be really
tough with them. Maybe a letter, clearly stating your position would
help make things clearer to them. Maybe you could talk to some good
friends of their's, gently and tactfully explaining the problem, and
have them talk to your in-laws on your behalf. I am just thinking that
maybe having a peer rather than son & daughter-in-law point out to them
what they are doing might be more effective. (not that something like
that should be necessary, but in this case ...)
Hope you can make them understand that you are grown-ups now, the
parents of this child to be, and that have no legal authority or guardian-
ship of the child.
My parents have taken care of my sister's son for extended weekends on
occasions & my Mom has a wonderful relationship with the little guy,
everybody in the family refers to it as a mutual admiration society.
But then, my Mom does not try to interfere in anyway with my sister &
her husband's parenting, and is not possesive or domineering. It's a
lot easier to be generous with your children to the grandparents when
they're not jealously trying to take over.
Good luck.
Leslie
|
928.34 | Their hearts are in the right place. | NEWPRT::WAHL_RO | | Mon Jul 22 1991 19:38 | 40 |
|
Wendy,
There's nothing like a grandchild to turn 2 normal adults into
babbling {you fill in the rest}.
Think about what kind of relationship you envision your baby having
with this set of grandparents - then talk about it with your husband.
It sounds like you and your husband are putting a plan in place for
setting some limits for them. Make sure you both agree to the plan
and discuss all deviations to it. Even my dear Kevin tried this one,
"I told the babysitter it was okay for my teenage sister and her boyfriend
to pick up the baby and meet me 90 miles from here."
The comments they made would make me feel threatened....
I would shudder at the thought of ANYONE taking my newborn away for a week.
(Especially 8 hours away!) Although, breastfeeding has a way of taking care
of any separation issues. You and the wee one will be a package deal.
I had a very supportive pedi on this issue.....
"Have your mother-in-law call me if she questions my judgement" The La
Leche league had a good pamphlet written especially for grandmothers
explaining breastfeeding and how to be supportive in other ways than
feeding the baby.
Maybe you could find some ways to include your in-laws without them
taking the baby away? They sound like they really want to help - Would
they be insulted if you asked them to cook, clean, laundry, or make phone
calls? [This didn't work with Kevin's folks]
I'll stop rambling after this last tidbit, it was DREADFUL having my
in-laws visit ALL day both days I was in the hospital. Besides
being exhausted, dripping from every oriface, breastfeeding was a learned
behavior and I really didn't appreciate the audience. Who says
grandparents aren't visitors?
Good luck Wendy - You've impressed me with your logic SO many times,
I look forward to reading your reply on how you managed this one!
Rochelle
|
928.35 | Talk to them.... | EMDS::CUNNINGHAM | | Tue Jul 23 1991 08:52 | 27 |
|
Yes Wendy, you and Marc sure do have your hands full with his parents.
I'm so shocked that they could actually talk like that, never mind
thinking they could take her/him away from you so soon after birth for
a whole week! They really have nerve. My opinion is the same as many
others, I would get Marc to talk to them, or the 2 of you sit down and
talk to them together before this goes on any further. The longer you
don't say anything, the more plans they may start to make, and the
further along the problem will get.
I seem to have the opposite problem with my parents... my father and
my Step mom actually....they dont seem to be very excited at all. And
the hardest part is, that my step mom LOVES infants (has her daycare
license) and now takes care of one 10 mos old 2 days a week. Well, this
childs mother is about to give birth to another in Sept (me in October),and
thats all I ever hear about...."I can't wait for so-so to have her
baby"...over and over again.. Nothing about can't wait for ME to have
your grandchild ("step" I know...but...still..)....Just so-n-so's
baby. Granted, she will be taking care of this infant 2 days a week
later on....(and will not be doing daycare for me because of
traveltimes) but it just really hurts hearing it over and over, and
not hearing much excitment for mine. Luckily my Mom is really
excited for me, and about being a "grandma"....so thats takes my mind
off of it a bit... Guess I can't have everything.
Chris
|
928.36 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | The U word makes me c-sick! | Tue Jul 23 1991 10:50 | 18 |
| .-2 mentions that it sounds like these people really want to help. It
doesn't sound like that at all to me ... It sounds like there is more
than the issues of baby involved here ... in effect they are denying
your marriage to their son for whatever reason, and therefore, the baby
is their son's baby which they intend to raise for him (probably because
at the same time their son is too young to be married and have a baby).
In essence, you don't exist in their eyes.
What to do ? Good question ... but you will have to get Marc's 110%
co-operation that they must be stood up ... unflinchingly and *no*
compromises, whether they are his parents or not. They will have to
learn that this is going to be yours and Marc's baby and that you are
rearing the child. This is going to be anything but easy.
(My grandmothers were shall we say possessive and the family rifts
lived on for years!)
Stuart
|
928.37 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Jul 23 1991 12:02 | 56 |
|
Marc and I have had many long talks about how we are going to
handle his parents (and mine, we have problems on my side as well, they
just don't come up to visit ;-)).
It took until last night for us to feel safe enough from his
parent's assault (insult) for us to talk about it rationally.
One of the earlier replies to this note helped. The title was
something to the effect "their hearts are in the right places". When I
first saw that, I wanted to respond and say, no, you don't understand,
these people are destructive, they don't care about *us* they only want
to fill their own needs.
Then I realized that both of Marc's parents are just that, children
who have never had their needs met. They are stuck in some sort of
development phase. They don't know (and I dare say, may never know) how
to communicate on an adult-adult level, they only know how to
communicate on a child-child level. They also can't fulfill *our* needs
as parents because they don't have a clue as to what we need, they only
know what they want. I honestly believe that they think they are "doing
the right thing" and that because they do not recognize us as adults
(or I as the mother of this child, you are right Stuart) that they feel
they have some sort of obligation to take care of him. Having realized
this, for one of the first times, I was able to get beyond the anger
towards them and actually feel some pity for them.
This, however, does *not* excuse unacceptable behavior, it only
makes it easier for us to understand where it is coming from.
Marc and I are going to write down a set of agreed upon boundaries,
for example "no one takes the child out of daycare except for Marc or
myself" (we've had visions of the parents surprising us by showing up
one afternoon and taking the child "just for the afternoon") and we are
going to stick to these boundaries. By writing it down we can be sure
of consistency and not fall trap to the "well Marc said this, and now
you are saying this" problem.
"There will be no unsupervised visits" etc.
We are also going to practice some responses to situations that we
anticipate, like: "We are the parents and we have decided no" or "we
do not want an untrained puppy around the baby".
I think that initially, it will be very difficult and there will be
a lot of hard feelings (on their side) and guilt (on our side) isn't
there always with parent-conflicts?
But I'm hoping that with repetition, and consistency, they will
recognize where the limits are. If they do not agree to our limits and
boundaries we have the option of telling them to stay away.
I appreciate the support and words of wisdom that have come from
the people in this notesfile, Thanks.
Wendy
|
928.38 | One MOMMY. One DADDY. | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Jul 23 1991 12:48 | 14 |
| Wendy,
Best wishes to you and Marc. If necessary - consider a third party to
help you guys through this one. Everyone has opinions. Sometimes when
you are involved it's hard to be impartial.
Personally, I was frightened by this comment: "The mother thought that
"mama" or "mommy" would be a cuter name for her instead of "grandma".
Sounds like she needs help, big time. Maybe I'm reading into it, but
it doesn't feel right to me.
Take care, Wendy.
marcia
|
928.39 | Stay Firm! You Can Do It!! | CSC32::DUBOIS | Sister of Sappho | Tue Jul 23 1991 14:18 | 36 |
| re: -1
Well, not necessarily *one* mommy and *one* daddy, but I agree that a
grandmother is not a mommy or mommy-figure unless by chance she is actually
raising the child. *Definately*, Wendy's mother-in-law doesn't qualify!
re; Wendy's last note
< Then I realized that both of Marc's parents are just that, children
< who have never had their needs met. They are stuck in some sort of
< development phase.
Oh, my, does this sound familiar!!! My mother was like this, too, in different
ways. She often drove me *crazy*. Finally one day Shellie described her
to me as being like a 2 year old or younger (Evan was 2 at the time), and we
finally started putting this in perspective, and even being able to anticipate
behaviours from her better!!!!!
I have good news: my mother has changed tremendously over the last couple
of years. Evan is now 3 1/2 and she gets along better with him and with us.
I don't even know how my mother is because she has changed so much that now
I don't know what to expect. Wendy, there is hope. Your parents-in-law
may actually change one day, too. In the meantime, hang in there. I'm glad
you and your husband are making these firm rules and practicing the words.
That will be *very* helpful. It's basically what I had to do with my mom,
too. I had to decide on my limits and set boundaries and stick to them.
Then she had to abide by *my* rules. It has worked well, and I think it
will work well for you, too.
I'm also glad that you are sharing with us about this rough time. Many of us
have been through rough times with parents and in-laws, too, and we share in
your grief (though your mom-in-law seems to be a severe case). Thank you for
letting us in, and for allowing us to support you. You are worth it, and you
*will* succeed.
Carol
|
928.40 | It wouldn't hurt to warn the day-care people | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Jul 23 1991 15:29 | 5 |
| Please make sure the day-care people _know_ beyond a shadow of a doubt
that the grand-parents may not take the child out without written
permission from a parent.
-John Bishop
|
928.41 | Daycare ... Release Form | CALS::JENSEN | | Wed Jul 24 1991 10:16 | 14 |
|
John:
Juli's daycare center (keeping in mind that EVERY daycare center is different
and has a different set of policies/procedures) ... will only release
a child to the person(s) listed on the Release Form. This form
requires the person(s) name, address AND SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER. When
this "person" comes to get the child, the info on the form MUST match
his/her driver's license and SS card. Doesn't matter WHO YOU ARE, the
kid isn't going to be released to you unless you are listed on the form
AND have the matching IDs.
Over-protective ... heck NO!!!! I just made sure I had enough people
listed to "cover us" in case a worst case situation occurs.
|
928.42 | depends | TLE::RANDALL | | Wed Jul 24 1991 12:12 | 7 |
| It's true that most centers are very strict about who they release
a child to (especially touchy with conested custody cases) but if
you have the less formal arrangement of family day care, you have
to be a lot more explicit about the directions for things like
this.
--bonnie
|
928.43 | | CSOA1::ZACK | | Wed Jul 24 1991 14:10 | 8 |
| The daycare center that I have enrolled my daughter also has a release
form. They will not release my daughter to anyone that is not on the
list. The list contains SS#, and the persons signature which they
match at the time of release.
Hope this helps.
Angie
|
928.44 | turn statements positive ? | ISLNDS::JANCAITIS | Que sera, sera | Wed Jul 24 1991 16:27 | 27 |
| re : .41-.43, while most daycare situations have the "list", I have
an agreement with both my son's daycare and his school....EVEN if
the name is on the list, NO-ONE takes my son unless I have sent in
a written note or PERSONALLY call them to tell them so-n-so is
coming. This especially helped out when I was concerned about
well-meaning relatives wanting to "help out" by picking him up
when I was in the hospital recently.
Wendy, I think you and Marc are taking the right approach with
writing down what you feel best; I would only suggest that you also
find a way to include (if you can find some) some POSITIVE things
to make it more pleasant (:-{) for all involved....for example,
instead of saying "no untrained puppy around the baby", think of
rewording to when you *might* consider having a puppy around (trained,
certain age for your child.....)...when I had conflicts with my father
over how I was raising my son (by NO means anything like your's !!),
I found he was much more receptive when he felt he was being heard and
not ignored (e.g., Dad, I understand what you're saying/how you're
feeling, and I will take your opinions on X into consideration)
Bottom-line, though, you have to do what you and Marc feel is best
for YOUR baby......everyone else's advice, whether they be friends,
family, doctor, co-worker...... is often helpful in helping you sort
out what you really want/need/feel is best....but YOU are the parents.
Best of luck,
Debbi
|
928.45 | Dealing with Grandparents | KERNEL::FISCHERI | I'm not from Bushey | Mon Jan 06 1992 08:04 | 24 |
| My wife and I had a daughter 6 weeks ago and my parents are driving
us both mad. I was wondering if anyone has been in a similar situation
and has any advice on how to tactfully handle this.
This is their first grandchild and they are obviously very proud, but... They
come over to see us and pass the baby from one to the other every five or
ten minutes, they pass comments on what she is wearing - "Oh no, you can't
have a little girl dressed in blue! Oh no, you don't want to buy her that", etc.
They insist on seeing us every weekend, and then on Saturday try to make
arrangements for Sunday too. If she's lying in her cot and makes a few
squeaks (she does a lot of that), they'll take her out of there without asking
whether that's OK. Similarly, on Christmas Eve, we arrived at their house. I
took her in in her car seat and sat her in the hall, then said, "It's OK, my wife
will get her out while I get the other stuff". I go to the car, come back and
the seat is empty.
They seem to be "taking over", undermining us as parents and generally
interfering. Their intentions are good however, so it makes it difficult to just
come out and say the truth about how we feel. I know they'd get upset, but with
the way things are now, they're driving my wife and me up the wall.
Thanks
Ian
|
928.46 | we had same problem | LUNER::TRUMPOLT | | Mon Jan 06 1992 08:24 | 25 |
| Boy Ian do you have a problem. We had this kinda problem with my
in-laws. My parents were fine and only did this once, but my
mother-in-law was a different story. She would basicly do the same as
yours parents are doing. My husband is an only child and this was
their first grandchild, my parents had 3 others at the time when Alex
was born.
Well my mother-in-law held/picked-up/tried to tell us one thing to much
and my husband got fed up with it and finally told her in a nice way to
lay off and we would raise him our way and not to hold him to much
cause he had to get used to being left in his seat etc. She finally
agreed after they argued for a half hour. And know Alex is two and she
buys him everything he wants. I think she is getting back at us for
what we did.
Maybe you and your wife should tell these happy grandparents not to
pick-up/pass the baby around to much. Babies are subseptebal(sp) to
catching alot of germs/colds from others. So maybe you guys should
tell them in a nice way not to hold your child so often. This will
cause you some problems when you child gets older cause it will want to
get picked up all the time and you don't want that to happen.
Well I hope this helps you out. Good luck.
Liz
|
928.46 | It's hard | PROXY::HOPKINS | Volunteer of the month | Mon Jan 06 1992 09:52 | 12 |
928.47 | | BGTWIN::dehahn | 98...don't be late | Mon Jan 06 1992 10:03 | 26 |
|
Does this sound familiar!
A few comments:
Your daughter is only 6 weeks old. Give them some time for the novelty to
subside. Everyone wants to hold a newborn baby. Once she starts to crawl it may
not like to be held and the grandparents will marvel in how mobile your child
is 8^).
Whether you realize it or not you are very lucky to have grandparents that are
willing to babysit every weekend. Take advantage of this...get away with your
wife and enjoy your marriage. Don't think of this time as neglecting your child,
think of it as building your family foundation.
Accept as much help and advice as you are comfortable with, but if you feel they
are interfering with your raising the child then politely make it clear to them
that you appreciate their advice but you are going to raise your child your way.
My inlaws sound a lot like yours, and I've had to lay the law down with them. I
think they are just trying to help, they probably think you may not know what
you're doing. In time you will earn their respect and when you disagree with
them they will honor your decisions.
Good luck,
Chris
|
928.48 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Jan 07 1992 09:43 | 48 |
|
Gosh, I've just got to reply to this one ;-)
By now most of you know about our in-law (his) problems, well...
they continue. I really understand what you are going through, it may
sound trivial that the grandparents are holding your baby a lot but to
you it isn't. In a way it represents the parents interfering with your
life (not doubt) *again*.
When this recently happened with us, I literally held my tongue and
kept reminding myself that *we* are the baby's parent's and they are
not. *NO ONE* can replace us (you see part of this is as much my
insecurity as their obsession) I held my tongue so much during that
weekend that the following week I ended up getting a mammoth sore
throat, coincidence? perhaps.
There are certainly limits (boundaries) however. Spencer was in the
middle of his first cold and when they (a tribe of 9 people) came to
visit us, he was tired and cranky as were we. The first evening Spencer
fell asleep and we put him to bed. The grandmother proceeded to have a
literal temper tantrum the next day saying that she was not being
allowed to hold the baby. Basically Marc told her that sorry, the
baby's health comes first and if he needs to sleep then he gets to
sleep.
It's tough, they (as a group) make comments through the baby
to us (you know, "oooh, doesn't your mommy know that you should be
doing this... or that... or whatever") because they are afraid of
addressing us directly.
One thing that we have learned is to have a planned schedule the
next time they visit (and no longer will they come 9 at at time again),
we didn't have a plan this time and all of those people just sat in the
living room getting drunk (another story) watching football (in *our*
house!), expecting us to wait on them, and having no desire (why should
they?) to leave. Next time, we will set visiting hours or plan to meet
them somewhere where there is an agreed upon time limit.
Each time they come to visit, it does get easier, remember that
*you* are the baby's parents, and even if they are grandparents, blood
does not guarantee a relationship. You do not owe them time with your
baby, whatever time you *grant* is on *your* terms. It sounds a little
harsh and I'm sure that some will disagree but it takes the power away
from your parents and gives it back to you where it belongs.
Wendy
|
928.49 | | SHALOT::KOPELIC | Quality is never an accident . . . | Tue Jan 07 1992 13:05 | 13 |
|
Oh, Wendy, I couldn't agree more. I couldn't hold my toungue anymore
when my in-laws (his mother) said "Grandparents have rights too" NO
you have no RIGHTS to my child. We are the parents, and we'll say how
the child is raised. Any time you spend with my child will be on my
terms. That time is a privilege, not a right. (This after such things
as waking a two week old up because it was a convenient time for THEM
to take it for a walk!)
I am glad to hear someone else with that same opinion.
Thanks,
Bev
|
928.50 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Tue Jan 07 1992 13:56 | 19 |
| Oh to find a happy medium ...
My grandparents so dogged my mother (their d-i-l) over raising me that my
mother decreed that she would NEVER interfere in our parenting. Well,
she took that to it's logical conclusion so that when they came to visit
us 10 years ago not long after the arrival of our first -- she hardly held
her grand-daughter ... didn't feed her ... didn't change her ... basically
did nothing to help. This from a woman who loves babies.
And it has stayed that way now with 3 of ours, 2 of my brother's and 3 of
my sister's. She is almost totally hands off, unless asked.
And this is every bit as frustrating as too much interference ... and
in some ways worse, because not only is she hardly a grandparent, she
is no longer much of a "mother" to her family either.
I can assure you a happy medium is DEFINITELY preferable to this!
Stuart
|
928.51 | update the babynames readers?!? | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Tue Jan 07 1992 14:39 | 5 |
|
Not to rathole or anything 8-)....but, Ian (.45), what did you end
up naming your daughter? Molly?
Carol
|
928.52 | | KERNEL::FISCHERI | I'm not from Bushey | Wed Jan 08 1992 08:42 | 9 |
| No, the wife went off that so we went with a slight, if somewhat
seasonal, variation.....
Holly Rose Fischer
Ian
ps I haven't seen my parents to tell 'em off yet! I'll let you know how I get on
|
928.53 | Grandparents | AKOCOA::LESAGE | | Wed Jan 08 1992 11:25 | 8 |
| I think most parents had some sort of problems with new grandparents.
My parents lived less than a quarter of a mile away from us when our
kids were first born. My father was always over because he was retired
and he was not afraid to give his 2 cents worth on child raising. It
did not bother my wife or myself too bad. Anyway involved grandparents
make great babysitters and their babysitting price was great (free)!
So if they aggravate you too much let them sit for a night and go away
to with your spouse.
|
928.65 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Wed Jan 08 1992 11:45 | 23 |
|
Now this is also a point that I don't seem to understand about the
in-laws. They keep telling us to go on vacation and they will (gladly)
take care of the baby for us while we are away. (like they would be
trusted with our baby in the first place)
For cryin' out loud! Why on earth do you think we decided to start
a family and go through all the trouble of pregnancy and delivery? so
that we could go places without the baby?! We decided to have a baby
because we wanted to start a *family*. To me a family vacations
together and spends time together.
Granted things may change in the future when Spencer gets older
(although I personally don't see much of a change happening), but
because both Marc and I work, we look forward to all of the time we can
spend with Spencer when we are not at work. And to boot, we will have
time to spend with each other.
What is the mentality (other than ownership) that suggests we go on
a vacation without our baby? (Please don't say respect or care of us
the parents because that is simply not the case).
Wendy for whom this is a *very* HOT topic
|
928.66 | No thanx, Gram, how bout YOU take a vaca?! | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:01 | 13 |
| Wendy, I'm glad you said that! For me, a vacation without Alexandra
would feel like an *exile*. I have enough guilt about time with her
(high or low quality!) being restricted to nights and weekends, as it
is with all working parents. I *love* her; I need vacations from
*work*, not from my daughter.
Sure, we get ticked off at each other (slam doors, kick wastebaskets,
plead our respective cases to the cat) and I don't mind the odd evening
on my own. But no matter how well-meaning a grandparent's offer is, it
still reminds me of the old joke: Grand Prize, one week in Pittsburgh!
Second prize, TWO weeks in Pittsburgh!
Leslie
|
928.67 | Your day will come, she chuckled maniacally... | CSCOA1::HEFFELFINGER | Vini, vidi, visa | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:05 | 33 |
| Wendy,
Just wait until Spencer is 2-3 years old.
Katie: What's that?
Me: That's a moose.
Katie: What's that? (pointing to the same moose)
Me: That's a moose.
(repeat about 10 times until...)
Katie: What's that? (pointing to the same moose)
Me: That's a moose.
Katie: No, it's not!
ARRRGGGGGHHHHH!!! Why do you ASK me if you won't believe what I
tell you!!!!! :-}
Repeat this whole thing with about 4 more objects over a half an hour
period while trying to carry on a conversation with another adult and you
begin to understand the reasoning for getting away for a while.
:-)
Tracey,
Who loves being Katie's mommy -- *most* of the time.
|
928.68 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:14 | 34 |
| >
> Granted things may change in the future when Spencer gets older
> (although I personally don't see much of a change happening), but
> because both Marc and I work, we look forward to all of the time we can
> spend with Spencer when we are not at work. And to boot, we will have
> time to spend with each other.
I know it seems hard to envision, but after 10 years of children, I can
assure you, we would very much like to be able to take a vacation (albeit
only a few days) away from our kids. Children do stifle your relationship
with your spouse ... You end up being parents ... you forget how to be
a loving spouse as you were early on in your marriage ... and you may
forget how to be yourself. You NEED time for yourself to continue to be
you, you need time for your spouse and not a parent to develop your
partnership. You need these things for yourselves and you need them in
order to be better parents.
It is easier to start off making time for both yourself and your spouse
rather than discover it 5 to 10 years from now when you discover you've
lost touch with your spouse as a person rather than a parent and suddenly
find you are meeting in front of a judge in a divorce court, or as we did
in a hospital where my wife was being treated for depression.
We cannot manage a vacation without the kids, but we have had a couple
nights alone, but more importantly started to go out regularly both as a
couple and individually to things we enjoy.
So yes, the idea of a few days without the kids is NOT a bad idea. On the
other hand from what you've described earlier, your in-laws do seem to
have ulterior motives. That's something you have to reconcile with yourselves
and the grandparents. I'm sure there will come a time when you'll
understand what I mean!
Stuart
|
928.69 | lots of reasons | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:29 | 60 |
| Wendy,
There are lots of reasons why parents want to vacation without
kids of any age.
Sometimes it's simply that interest or business calls them
somewhere they don't think is good for the baby. People do hike
Nepal with babies on their backs, but I wouldn't be among them.
Many parents find that after a few months of intense baby care,
their personal relationship deteriorates because they never have
the time or energy to talk to each other, let alone make love or
read a book. It's great if yours hasn't, if you're finding it
energizing, but that isn't always the case, especially for mothers
who suffer from post-partum depression. Or for the parents of
kids with chronic colic or medical problems or other stress
factors.
Not so very long ago, parents who needed some space away from the
kids couldn't leave the kids with someone else without being
considered cruel and neglectful. Your in-laws might be reflecting
their own wish that they had had some space when they were new
parents.
Depending on the temprements and interests of family members, as
well as practical considerations, there are times when everybody
will be going different ways, alone or in small groups, for long
or short periods of time. For instance, I sometimes take
vacations alone when I want to do some serious work on my writing,
which doesn't interest anyone else and also makes me very poor
company. Neil has taken the kids on vacations without me when he
has more vacation time than I do. We usually take family
vacations, but once we went to Australia for three weeks when the
kids were 3 and 13, leaving them with my parents. Now that Kat's
older, she sometimes opts to stay home.
When Kat was our only child, we did more things as a family unit.
Now, if one of us takes Steven and the other takes David, then
each boy has the undivided attention of one parent. When all of
us are together, each boy has half the attention of each parent,
which remains two halves and doesn't add up to one. Plus we each
get to share special interests, rather than trying to find
something everybody likes. Steven and I like architecture. Neil
stands in the doorway and yawns. Everybody has a better time if
I take Steven on a house tour and Neil stays home with the baby.
Your in-laws might even simply be reflecting a desire to see more
of their new grandchild. Neil's mother used to urge us to leave
the kids with her for a while, just so she could see them for
longer. We finally took her up on it and left Kat and Steven with
her for an overnight celebration of our fifth anniversary. She
didn't offer again :)
None of this means that YOU should want to vacation without
Spencer, only that many people do want time away from their
children andd it doesn't reflect anything about the quality of the
parenting or of the family. It's just a matter of personal
situation and taste.
--bonnie
|
928.60 | IMHO, kids need consistency | DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:35 | 36 |
| re: .48
Wendy,
not having such a situation as yours makes it tough for me to truly
relate, but of all the things you've described, the one that got my
blood boiling was the part about the grandparents saying things like:
(paraphrasing)"Doesn't your mommy/daddy know that you should be doing
this or that...". In my opinion, such talk is totally out of line for
two main reasons (and a host of other reasons):
- it might cause the child to be confused about what is considered
'right' vs. what is 'wrong'(i.e. your standards vs.those of the
grandparents)
- it might cause the child to be confused about who is telling the
truth. In their basic 'black-and-white' world, what kind of message
do they get when mom/dad say "A" and grammy/grampy say "B"?
And of all the problems you've decribed, this is the one I would take
immediate action to correct. (In fact, we've encountered some minor
instances of such behavior from both sides of the family, and each time
we've very quickly and decisively made it clear that we play by our own
rules, and not necessarily those that we had been raised by.) Luckily,
everyone was able to accept this and the incidents were quickly put to
rest.
I wish you the best of luck (and I thank god that our parents are
comparatively easy to deal with...:^)
Freddie
P.S. Nick's 2yrs/3mos, and so far we've only spent 1 overnight away from
him, and you know something...we wouldn't have it any other way...;^)
P.P.S. It was one of the hardest & longest nights I can remember...:^):^)
|
928.62 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Wed Jan 08 1992 13:48 | 39 |
|
I didn't mean to imply that anyone who goes on vacation without
their child is a "bad" parent, and if I offended anyone, it was
certainly not my intention.
I think that the distinction in my case is that the in-laws keep
*insisting* that we go on vacation. It rings of falsehood and trickery
and *that* is why I am so opposed to the idea of a vacation without the
baby in this particular instance.
Although again (in our case) I can't imagine Marc and I going on a
vacation *together* without Spencer. I admit that things may change in
the future but for now I don't see it.
As fate would have it, Marc "gave" me a vacation (just me not him
or Spencer) for three days at a place called Kripaula (it's a yoga
community that I have been to before). I was very grateful for the gift
and am looking forward to going away for three days to regain some
personal strength (sometime this summer).
The difference here is that Spencer will be taken care of and will
be safe. I know that I will miss them both but I am looking forward to
this break.
So you see, I see and understand the need for getting away and
having breaks. What I can not understand (and what I could not make
clear in an earlier reply) is the mentality that we should go on
vacation so that we can accomodate the needs of the grandparents.
I realize that they have their own hurts and pains from their lives
and parenting experience but their unresolved pains and issues are
*not* reason for us to act in any manner that makes us feel
uncomfortable.
The issue is so complex that I am not sure that my intent is clear.
sigh.
|
928.63 | | SSGV01::ANDERSEN | | Wed Jan 08 1992 16:04 | 8 |
|
> I didn't mean to imply that anyone who goes on vacation without
> their child is a "bad" parent, and if I offended anyone, it was
> certainly not my intention.
Thanks for clarifying your position, I've been biting my lip to the
point of blood shed.
|
928.64 | Moderator's note | TNPUBS::STEINHART | | Wed Jan 08 1992 16:16 | 6 |
| I moved the following 6 notes to note 31, which covers Travel Without
Children. The moderators' consensus is to restore them to this
location.
Laura
co-mod
|
928.70 | just an opinion, not a judgement | DELNI::BRYDON | | Thu Jan 09 1992 13:30 | 31 |
|
I would like to just interject this and hope that no one feels
offended, its just an opinion.
Grandparents are special adults (most cases) that your child has the
opportunity to develop a wonderful relationship with. Your child will
develop many relationships in their life apart from you. Some good,
some bad and thats all part of life, learning and growing.
Most grandparenting relationships that I have been exposed to, which
may not be the case here (I can't judge that), could be viewed as
undermining and spoiling of children. The showering of attention, love
and gifts. That is not a parenting relationship. That is not trying
to take over your child. That is usually a person who is trying to
develop a close relationship different from your own with your child in
the few hours a week, month or year that they have to spend with your
child. That is probably how they see it. They've raised their
children (the best they felt they could), giving them values for life,
doing the day to day care and upbringing of a child. Now they're
grandparents who just want to enjoy their grandchild.
RE: Grandparents have rights! I think thats a topic that is coming up
more and more in the news. Their are actually states who are passing
laws giving Grandparents visiting rights to their grandchildren. Most
cases are Divorce cases. I don't think your mother in law meant
anything more than, I want a grandmother relationship, time to develop
it with this new person. Its a new situation for both of you and
you're just not ready to relinquish any time to anyone else yet and
that your right.
|
928.71 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Thu Jan 09 1992 14:18 | 21 |
| re: last
I was doing okay with your reply until the last paragraph.
I am a firm believer that grandparents do *not* have automatic
rights when it comes to grandchildren. I believe that they must *earn*
their rights. (and that goes for all family memebers whether they be
aunts/uncles, cousins, etc.)
I have heard and read about the court cases where grandparents are
being given court forced visitation rights and it makes me very
concerned. I honestly do not believe that *some* of these decisions are
in the best interest of the children and that instead, these actions
serve the needs of the adults (controlling, manipulation, retaliation,
etc.)
I would very sincerely be interested to hear of why you think
"grandparents have rights!" - blanket statement.
Wendy
|
928.72 | | NEURON::REEVES | | Thu Jan 09 1992 14:33 | 27 |
| I agree with .70
I have seen a tremendous change in my own parents as each
grandchild has entered their lives. With the first one they did come
off as trying to take over and tell my sister how the child should be
cared for, but now that I look back on it, they were just trying to
help a first time mom who didn't know the ropes in the best way they
knew how. But once my sister talked to them and let them know how
she felt, things changed (not right away and not drastically, but
it was obvious how they were trying.) Now that they have 4
grandchildren the novelty has worn off and they now spend time just
being grandparents.
I personally wouldn't know what we would do without Shayne's
grandparents on both sides doing what they call "Grandparents right
to spoil". With the tremendous financial burden we have come up
against since Shayne has come into our lives, I quite honestly don't
know what we would have done without the gifts of clothes and toys and
free babysitting without the grandparents.
I have learned to grin and bear the seemingly "intrusive" comments
and be thankful that my son and I have people who truly care about us,
and try to help us with their knowledge and experience.
One thing that amazes me, is why do we take the advice of total
strangers, but when it's family we get very defensive and they are
butting in???
just MHO
Malinda
|
928.73 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu Jan 09 1992 17:38 | 54 |
| While I can understand that grandparents will spoil, will disagree with
your parenting styles and so on, I think, judging by what Wendy has
written before is that there are more family dynamics involved here than
just doting, zealous, jealous grandparents. So all these comments about
having to come to terms with the idea that they are only trying to help
and or dote on their grandchild are not really going to give Wendy the
answer she is seeking.
Regretably, I think, Wendy, that you are going to first have to find a
solution to the other family dynamics that you have with your in-laws
before you will ever find a way of graciously accepting their doting on
your son; (whether you will ever be exactly happy or not about it or
comfortable with it will be another matter). A discussion of those
dynamics probably doesn't belong here though.
As to whether grandparents have rights really depends on whether you believe
that parents have rights over their children, whereupon the discussion will
boil down further to the definition of what is a right. We have no rights
over our own children ... we have responsibility for them which confers
upon us a certain status which might be perceived as a right. Society
defines certain roles for us in the upbringing of our children that if
denied us, such as when children are taken as wards of court and so on,
we feel our "rights" are violated, when in fact this is not really a right.
In terms of parental visitation rights and their grandparental counterparts,
these are anything but rights ... they are privileges ... if abused they
can be taken away. Your rights cannot be taken away.
Grandparental rights, as in "grandparents have rights", aren't rights either,
nor are they really the privileges as described above ... they too are
societal norms ... In years gone by, the typical family was probably far
more close knit across the generations ... it certainly was in mine ...
and grandparents played a far greater role in the overall family. Today,
with families moving across continents and so on this isn't the case. We
all expect more privacy, more individuality, the right to be unhindered in
the development of our own life. There are elders out there who feel that
they are, as a result, being rejected by their own children, and thus
are afraid of being rejected from seeing their grandchildren grow up. Let's
face it, watching children grow up is a marvellous experience.
It wouldn't surprise me that if elders feel rejected by their own children
they would probably feel that they definitely don't want to be rejected
from their grandchildren, so you'd see a "grandparents have rights too"
type reaction, confusing the privileges with societal norms.
Long winded, huh ?
An explanantion ? Maybe...
Helpful ? Anything in those ramblings help at all Wendy ?
Cheers,
Stuart
|
928.74 | On Grandparents | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Fri Jan 10 1992 03:41 | 34 |
| My children only knew their paternal grandmother, a wonderful lady who spoiled
them rotten, a very short time. They could not have had a better oma and we
all mourned her passing. My parents are too far away to be a big
influence in their life. When you don't have a relationship to grandparents,
it is a part of life that is sadly missing.
But I wanted to tell another story. My niece who is now 18 will shortly have a
baby (maybe has already). She herself was the product of a divorce (her mother
left when she was two, she was only 17 when Mindi was born). Jim, my brother
remarried a divorcee who had two daughters of her own. My sister-in-law Sandi
absolutely hated Mindi who naturally hated her back. She began running away
when she was about 15, at 17 she ran away and got married, pregnant, divorced,
(in the space of 8 months) and soon the baby will be born.
She has no job, didn't finish high school, and can't go back and live with her
father. Her natural mother, who has since "grown up" has had Mindi live with
her at times but has a husband who hates children and is not in a stable
financial situation herself.
Mindi will probably give the baby up for adoption which may be the best solution
in this case. What I find sad and distressing is that her step mother is
pressuring her to give the child to a lawyer friend of hers so that she can
still be a "grandmother" to this baby. When Mindi's natural mother suggested
that she wanted to take the baby, Sandi's reaction was "over my dead body".
When "grandparents" becoming interferring and involved to this extent in the
lives of their children, I think this is beyond the bounds of acceptable
behaviour. I could take a lot of "interference" from my mother-in-law because
I knew she adored my children, had the best of intentions and, as my mother
had told me once when I complained about my grandmother, "They are with us for
such a short time, we should profit while we can." But you are still the
parents, your word goes.
Cheryl
|
928.75 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Fri Jan 10 1992 08:58 | 42 |
|
Well if anything, this topic is certainly getting lots of mileage
at my home in the evenings. ;-)
Thank you Stuart for the clarification of rights versus privileges.
You have hit the proverbial nail on the head (for me) and it is from
that view that my concern arises when I read about Grandparents being
granted (by courts) "rights". This discussion of rights reminds of the
children's book Brother Eagle, Sister Sky: (a must if only for the
illustrations)
How can you buy the sky?
How can you own the wind and rain?
As a corollary, how can anyone think that they should automatically
be a part of someone's life just because their is blood? We own
nothing, even our children are given to us and may at any time be taken
away.
This entire discussion may come across as cruel hearted, but ours
is simply not the case where we have loving, doting grandparents (on
both sides not just Marc's - it's just that my parents live so far away
that we rarely see them - they'll be up in the spring, no doubt you'll
be introduced to them then ;-)).
Stuart, you are correct, some dynamics which are beyond this
discussion and perhaps this notesfile need to be resolved before we can
come to some sort of peace in this situation. We're working on it, we
really are and feedback from this discussion has given us things to
consider as well as things to reject.
Don't you think that it is difficult for me to say that we as
parents must protect our baby and hence visitations with (certain)
relatives will be short and supervised. Do you realize that it puts me
in the same spot years from now if Spencer has decided that we have
caused him some harm through our parenting (or lack of) skills?
Setting boundaries is a tricky business. Sometimes, they come back
to haunt you. But for now, we have to do what we *honestly* think is
right and in the best interest for *our* family.
Wendy
|
928.76 | thoughts on function and grandparents | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Fri Jan 10 1992 10:39 | 49 |
| It's hard for those of us who grew up in families that were still
functioning as families, if not fully healthy, to understand the
workings of a dysfunctional family. Things that work for us
aren't much help in trying to restore a healthy family that
nourishes and strengthens all its members.
Things that are issues of overpossessiveness, lack of
communication, or simple jealousy in a functioning family become
issues of control, secrecy and denial, and retaliation in a
dysfunctional family. Most of the ways a functional family deals
with disagreements over a family member's roles depend on the
existence of the family dynamic, of bonds that include both give
and take, and a notion of individual boundaries as well as
reciprocal responsibilities.
those bonds, boundaries, and reciprocal responsibilities have been
distorted or destroyed in a dysfunctional family. Whereas in my
family I know if I explain clearly to my mother-in-law that I
think she's teaching my kids to depend too much on material
rewards by taking them shopping every time we visit her, and she
explains in return that where she lives, there isn't much else she
can do to share an activity with them, we can agree that she won't
take them shopping at the expensive department store every time,
they'll go to tag sales or the drug store some of the time.
That's because the apparent issue and the real issue are close to
the same -- our mutual desire to make the kids happy. Maybe there
are side issues that I feel like she's trying to buy them away
from me, but it's not enough to rupture the basic relationship.
In a dysfunctional family, the real issue would be over who
controls who. I couldn't count on saying "This is my boundary,
this is how I feel, please respect it" and having it respected.
I'd have to say something firmer, and probably more
confrontational, like "You will not take my kids to the store."
And in all likelihood she'd proceed to sneak them behind my back
or something to prove that she was in charge. Or something like
that.
It takes a lot of courage to admit one's family is dysfunctional.
It takes even more courage to try to heal one's self and one's
world. I think Spencer's got a great mom and dad, and that even
if he goes through a stage of resenting his parents and blaming
them for what they didn't do (as the mother of a teenager, I can
assure you: They all do that!) it will be brief because he'll have
the assurance that you loved him and confidence in the existence
of the basic relationships.
--bonnie
|
928.77 | In retrospect, perhaps my views are jaded. | SSGV01::ANDERSEN | | Fri Jan 10 1992 10:48 | 64 |
|
> As a corollary, how can anyone think that they should automatically
> be a part of someone's life just because their is blood?
You say this this as if it's ludicrous. The fact that there is a
blood line does make someone automatically a part of someones life,
genetically speaking. By this do you mean it's absurd for your in-laws
to feel they should be able to share sometime with their grandchildren?
> This entire discussion may come across as cruel hearted, but ours
> is simply not the case where we have loving, doting grandparents (on
> both sides not just Marc's - it's just that my parents live so far away
> that we rarely see them - they'll be up in the spring, no doubt you'll
> be introduced to them then ;-)).
Could this be the rub? Sounds a little like sour grapes, his
parents being closer than yours. I'm sure their guilty of everything
you percieve, but, would you have the same convictions if your parents
did the same things on their infrequent visits?
> Do you realize that it puts me in the same spot years from now if
> Spencer has decided that we have caused him some harm through our
> parenting (or lack of) skills?
Like for instance denying him a closer relationship with his grand-
parents?
> But for now, we have to do what we *honestly* think is
> right and in the best interest for *our* family.
Don't you consider immediate blood relations family?
Wendy, believe me, I'm not trying to engage you in a confrontation.
As a matter of fact I fear that when my first is born in 9 weeks I will
share alot of your sentiments regarding my in-laws. And believe me my
mother in-law is truely meddlesome. My wife is 5.3 years younger than
me and I married her when she was 23. She had never lived outside her
parents home and as a result her mother felt she had to inform her how
to live as wife and husband. Her mother would try to guilt her into
visiting more often. I finally had a huge confrontation with her mother
and told her how it was going to be, she was hurt and cried but we got
over it and now enjoy a much better relationship.
Her mother is so excited about the baby coming, her first grandchild,
that I fear she'll forget about the confrontation we had and some of
the things I said to her about trying to run our life. However, I will
not try, notice I said try, to restrict the babys bonding with her parents.
I also realize that part of my disdain, in the begining of our marriage
and a little still, for her mother is because my mother died before
ever seeing a grandchild from any of her four children. Hell, she never
even met my wife. In conjunction with that my father is alot older than
her parents and doesn't get out and about much so I resent that her
parents are in on everything and mine aren't.
And finally, I never had grandparents growing up. They died before I
was born and I always felt that void.
Best of Luck!
Sincerely,
Chester
|
928.78 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Fri Jan 10 1992 12:45 | 41 |
| re: .77
Given your background, I think this note was a good prospect for composing
your entry outside of NOTES, sitting on it, coming back to it, editing it and
then deciding to enter it. People who don't want to "engage . . . in a
confrontation" don't use loaded terms like "sour grapes."
A couple of your comments came across to me as very sarcastic, so I don't
really know what your intent was, but I'll respond to them.
>> Do you realize that it puts me in the same spot years from now if
>> Spencer has decided that we have caused him some harm through our
>> parenting (or lack of) skills?
> Like for instance denying him a closer relationship with his grand-
> parents?
If that "closer relationship" is harmful to Spencer, then yes,
that's what she should do. Whether Spencer likes it or not.
>> But for now, we have to do what we *honestly* think is
>> right and in the best interest for *our* family.
> Don't you consider immediate blood relations family?
From the context, it's pretty clear to me that she means nuclear
family. Her, Marc, and Spencer. And I agree with her statement.
Note that I am only agreeeing with the principles. I cannot comment on
whether the principles apply or not, because I have not personally witnessed
the situation. I agree wholeheartedly with Stuart -- there's a lot going on
here even without the Spencer issue.
I don't find the "rights" discussion very helpful; I DO believe that
grandparents have "rights," just by the nature of their being grandparents. I
also believe that parents have "rights", and kids have "rights."
Unfortunately sometimes those rights conflict and one person's right is
subservient to another; sometimes the "rights" are limited. But that doesn't
mean they don't exist.
Clay
|
928.79 | I had a feeling I would be misconstrued. | SSGV01::ANDERSEN | | Fri Jan 10 1992 13:11 | 9 |
| >People who don't want to "engage . . . in a
>confrontation" don't use loaded terms like "sour grapes."
Well Clay your wrong, I used the term and that wasn't the intent.
To oversimplify my position, try to correct the problem with out
having to restrict or supervise. Of course drastic situations
call for drastic measures.
|
928.80 | It really is common! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Fri Jan 10 1992 13:59 | 32 |
| Please folks, let try to get this back on track and perhaps a little
calmer. Although I need to comment this note has taken on some
interesting aspects and angles.
From our vantage point, we were living with my inlaws, whom I love
dearly and would literally do, and have done anything for us, from the
time I was 7 months pregnant until he was 4 months old. (remember he
was born 8+/- weeks early, had major surgery at birth, hospitalized
twice before we moved into our own new home). Mother inlaw would
literally do a "tee shirt check" each night, at bedtime. This woman
had this "thing" about babies being warm enough. I think she had given
me 6 crib sized blankets, and tried each night to put 4 of them on him,
on top of the blanket sleeper, receiving blanket, and turning the heat
up to 80! She made it clear that "she had raised 5 children to
adulthood and had partially raised her first two granddaughters, and
she knew everything, and I knew nothing"!
Several occations she would take him from me, and ther was no way in
God's green earth that she was going to give him back to me willingly.
What I had to do was start "making up" excuses such as it's time to
nurse him, after all I had the milk and no one else could do that, and
even started complaining that I was so "full" that it hurt. (it really
didn't). I remember several times retreating upstairs to our area and
balling my eyes out, and asking my husband why was she doing this to
us? (post partum depression, lack of privacy? yup probably).
We moved, and Mother inlaw doesn't come to visit often, but we do make
it a point to stop by their house frequently. Honestly, he still
seems to be treated a little more special than the other grandchildren.
And I still love them dearly.
Lyn
|
928.81 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Jan 10 1992 14:01 | 20 |
| Even if .77s note hadn't been intended as confrontational, it
cerainly showed a lack of understanding that there could be more
to this problem than first meets the eye, and was therefore somewhat
insensitive.
While I agree with you Clay that a discussion on the definition of
"rights" is not of itself very useful, I did it to attempt to show
that some of what we call "rights" are really loaded ways of describing
"privileges" or "societal expectations".
For example ... some people would say that they have right to control
a child's associations, while a grandparent has the right to have an
association with the grandchild. I look at it differently. I'd
say that in general society expects a close relationship between
grandchild and grandparent. On the other hand, the parent has the
RESPONSIBILITY to protect the child from what the parent feels might
be a damaging relationship, even if it is a relationship that society
in general believes should be good. There are no RIGHTS involved here.
Stuart
|
928.82 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Fri Jan 10 1992 15:28 | 74 |
|
I was away at a meeting at another facility and therefore am just
now getting back to this discussion.
My goodness, am I the only one in this notesfile who comes from or
who has to deal with dysfunctional (yes that is the proper word)
families?
Regarding .77, I did not take offense, it was merely an attempt at
suggesting some answers. I can tell you, however, with great certainty
that this is *not* an issue of sour grapes. (in fact that comment was
so far off base that it made me smile instead of be angry). Also, if I
were not prepared for some sort of confrontation, I would not be
entering my thoughts on this matter in this forum.
In the ride down to Mass. I cam up with this hypothesis:
Suppose Spencer's grandfather were Jeffery Dalhmer. (the guy who
tortured and murdered 17 people). I think that we can all pretty much
agree that Spencer would NEVER be allowed to spend time alone with that
person. Let's say that Jeffery claimed that he had blood rights to his
grandson and petitioned the courts for visitation rights. You can bet
that Marc and I would be fighting him in court to deny "rights" to his
grandson as a method of protecting Spencer. We would probably get some
sort of court order keeping Jeffery away from our son.
okay that's a very obvious case and the majority of us would say
that denying a relationship with the grandparent is in the best
interest of the child.
now, let's say that there were one or several of the following in a
grandparent situation:
alcoholism
drug addiction
mental instability
violence
sexual abuse
physical abuse
child neglect
.
.
.
or any of the other hundreds of crimes that are committed against
children.
granted the above "crimes" are not as severe as murder, however,
the *potential* for harm to the child exists in each of these cases.
Even if the grandparent(s) insist on a relationship with the
grandchild because of blood relations are you willing to take the risk
of injury and harm to your child? Does the mere fact that there is a
blood line indicate that a relationsip *must* exist?
And where does one draw the line? Perhaps the grandparents
demonstrate behavior that is not to your liking: bigotry, sexual
remarks, ownersip, are the grandparents entitled to a relationship with
your child *just* because they are related?
Oh also, that line about not considering blood relatives to be part
of my family, again sounds cruel but yup, that's the way it is. I have
close friends that are more of a family to me than some blood relatives
of mine are.
I think the old line is that you can choose your friends but you
can't choose your relatives.
Wendy
|
928.83 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Jan 10 1992 16:28 | 19 |
|
I think that a relationship with particularly a grandparent, even given
all those things would not be unreasonable BUT BUT BUT BUT BUT it is
very much up to you, the parent, to define what that relationship should
be, whether it's a full contact ("traditional") grandparental one, or at
the other end of the spectrum, no physical contact ... exchange photograph
one.
You are responsible for the well being of your child and if you believe
that physical contact with the grandparents would put your child in physical
and psychological danger then it is your duty to avoid that exposure. I
don't think that anyone here would argue that whatever the perceived "rights"
a grandparent might have, that your child's safety must come first.
I think that even if I went so far as to cut grandparents off from my
children, I would probably send the occasional photograph of them.
Stuart
|
928.84 | | DELNI::BRYDON | | Mon Jan 13 1992 09:41 | 25 |
|
Since I stuck the proverbial comment "Grandparents Rights" in there
that is getting so much controversy, I thought I'd try and clarify.
I've been told that I was speaking from my own situation which is
very different from Wendy's.
When I speak of rights, I guess I do mean privleges. Denial of
privleges and granting of privleges are very touchy subjects. When
do you Grant? When do you Deny? The parent is the person who is
responsible for the upbringing of the child and should Grant/Deny
those privleges in most cases. My intent is just to bring to
your attention that in the legal arena this is becoming more
apparent.
For every case you would not want to grant these privleges/rights there
are cases where you would. I think that I would really have to think
about it in the cases you have given. I would have to admit that I
would be afraid to leave my child with a mentally unstable or alcoholic
grandparent. In fact I wouldn't. But I would allow them to know each
other and have a supervised relationship, which you are doing.
/Kathy
|
928.85 | Abusive Grandparents | CSC32::DUBOIS | Love | Mon Jan 13 1992 13:52 | 28 |
| I think the key here is the potential for harm to the child.
No, Wendy, you aren't the only one who comes from a dysfunctional family,
but there are probably few of us here who will admit it.
I try to have my son have a good relationship with my father, as much as
it is possible. On the other hand, my father sexually abused me, and I
will *not* allow my son near him unless I am right there as well. My mother
is pretty good, but I still decided against using her as our son's guardian
if we were to die. She took this *very* hard. I still feel I made the
right choice.
We still visit and encourage a good relationship with my mother and her
mother.
On Shellie's side, her parents were abusive in many ways, and continue to be
so to their other grandchildren. Therefore, we steer clear of them. Shellie
has discontinued all contact with them, and therefore Evan does not see them,
either. Evan *does* see Shellie's grandmother (and sister, and aunt, etc).
So, what we try to do is concentrate on building relationships with the "good"
grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins and protect our son (and ourselves)
from the others. I believe that the average grandparent should have the
opportunity to spend time with and build a good relationship with their
grandchild. I believe that privilege stops when the chance of harm to the
child is high.
Carol
|