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Divorced grandparents come up short... for those of you who are GPs out there

Pilgrim Soul's picture

Good take on shaping one's own expectations. Advice column from Washington Post.

Carolyn Hax: Mom frustrated by grandparents who come up short

By Carolyn Hax, Published: January 3 | Updated: Saturday, January 4, 11:59 PM

Dear Carolyn: What should a mom do when her children feel rejected by their grandparents?

My in-laws are divorced, yet each is disconnected from my children’s lives, despite living no more than 15 minutes from us. My parents live an hour away yet visit frequently, help out and never miss a chance to see them in performances or sports competitions. The difference has become noticeable to all three, who are in elementary school.

Grammy only comes over when invited, and on holidays has dictated when that will be, based on her other kids’ schedules. We have never been invited to celebrate a holiday with her, nor has she ever offered to adjust her schedule for us. Did I mention these are her only grandchildren?

She does give gifts to the kids, and in emergency situations will babysit. She has attended a few of their events, but it requires my husband picking her up and catering to her, even though she is able to drive to the store, doctor appointments and hair appointments. As I said, she lives only 15 minutes away.

As for their Gramp, he has never attended a birthday or holiday gathering. Instead he calls up a day or so afterward and tells us when he can come over. He arrives, sits down, takes pictures with the kids and usually leaves within the hour. Now that he has other grandchildren, he often tells us of his babysitting and all the things he never did with his first three grandchildren.

When we need to replace a major appliance, or have outgrown baby equipment, my in-laws on both sides readily take what we have, without a thank you.

Now, here is the core of the issue. I married into a highly dysfunctional family, and the result is my kids now suffer. As an only child, I had dreamed of marrying and creating a warm, extended family for my children with loving aunts, uncles, cousins and especially grandparents. On my side of the family, my cousins, their kids and my aunts and uncles embrace and celebrate my children.

How do I resolve this? How do I explain to my children, who deserve to be loved and valued by the people around them, that these relatives are the losers in the equation? — Disillusioned Mama

You want to lay this all at your in-laws’ feet, and from your description, their behavior sure makes that tempting. We’re talking grandkids here! Who doesn’t love grandkids?!

Your in-laws, that’s who. Or, they love your kids but love themselves more. Or love them plenty but are morons at showing it. Or love them in the abstract but find kids annoying. Or they have the classic gerania in crania. Who knows. There’s certainly ample precedent for each.

Here’s what we do know:

You dreamed of a warm, extended family for your kids.

Then you married into a highly dysfunctional family.

And you didn’t adjust your dreams accordingly.

So while your in-laws are fully responsible for their stunted excuse for grandparenting, you are responsible for continually setting them up to fail — and continually exposing your kids to that disappointment.

Please just let go of the idea that your husband’s family will ever play their designated role in your dream. Holding onto it not only perpetuates the aforementioned cycle of failure and disappointment, but also, over time, will drain away any good feeling these people can and do generate. When you always hope for a gallon, you’ll never be pleased with a pint.

And pint appreciation is exactly what you need to learn, for everyone’s benefit, even your in-laws’, but especially your kids’.

When people disappoint you in significant ways, you have a choice: Carry on without them, or reset your expectations to reflect what they actually give. Since they’re your husband’s parents, and more oblivious than evil, attempting the latter makes sense.

That will require you to make changes, since you can’t make anyone else change. I suggest several:

Where your in-laws impose on you, cheerfully stick to your plans. “Darn, we’re serving the turkey at 6, not 3. We’d love to have you here, though, so do holler if your plans change.”

Where they come up short, treat short as sufficient. “A pint! Just what we hoped for, thank you.” Good sportsmanship, thy name is you.

Where they disappoint your family, use them to instill coping skills in your kids. “I’m disappointed, too. But you know what? This is how they’ve always been. That reminds me not to take their choices personally, and just accept them as they are.”

And finally, where they anger you: Remember your own words. They are the losers in this equation. Show them — and model for your kids — compassion, while also embracing your cousins et al. as all the extended family you need. Your dream of a loving family did come true, just not exactly as you had in mind.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/carolyn-hax-mom-frustrated...

amber3902's picture

Yeah, calling the grandparents losers just because they don't live up to her expectations is wrong.

In some families, what these grandparents do would not be called dysfunctional, it'd be called NORMAL. Maybe the grandparents are busy and have a life.

hereiam's picture

I guess my DH and I are losers, as our lives do not revolve around either of his daughters' children.

I doubt they are "suffering" because of it.

twoviewpoints's picture

Hmmm, well I guess she told me Biggrin ....my SGS asked Gpa and I for a $20,000 some odd dollar motorcycle for Christmas. I'm such a loser for not buying it pronto.