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My daughter favours one child over another

(44 Posts)
Nana69 Sat 20-Apr-19 08:04:23

My daughter has 4 children and is divorced. She is a good mum but favours one child over another. It breaks my heart to see how she picks on one and allows another to get away with anything. Any advice would be welcomed

Namsnanny Fri 26-Apr-19 14:30:25

Nana69...??

Nana69 Thu 25-Apr-19 13:09:13

Namsnanny, thank you for your understanding. I really appreciate your heartfelt comments x

jeanie99 Wed 24-Apr-19 15:31:40

It's a difficult one because your daughter will not appreciate your interferring into how she looks after her children.
Could you perhaps praise the child when you are with her and also try and get the favoured child to have a better relationship with her.
You know your grandchildren there could be a way round this without causing problems.

Namsnanny Sun 21-Apr-19 20:52:59

Your right Minshy, it does hurt and is unhealthy.
I too was (and still am) the bullied one in my family. They call it the scapegoat child I think.
Every time someone tried to help when I was a child, my Mother cold shouldered them and gradually they were dropped. That was the price they paid for 'interfering' on my behalf.
My Father tried and suffered the consequences.

In my experience its very hard to get a parent to understand what they are doing and how it affects the child.
IMV I doubt that a parent who behaves unfairly would be able to recognise it, and pointing it out probably wouldn't be looked on very favourably.

As GP's we are constantly berated to keep our opinions to ourselves as its the parents who call the shots, but what happens when they get it wrong, and we all do at times?

Nana69...I too am in the same position. My AC and partner favour one of their children over the other. The strange thing is they have accused ME (!) of favouritism!!
I wonder if it is displacement?

Its so heart breaking though isn't it? To watch one stand on the side lines whilst the other gets the fun love and attention.

I'm lucky I am 'allowed' to see the gc once every few months. I hang on and bite my tongue as much as I can, so I can spend time with the gc.
The only thing I can do is find opportunities to praise the less favoured one to try to show that I don't feel the same way about them as their parents.

I fear its too little but there is always the possibility of the parents taking it out on the scapegoat child, or stopping visiting all together!

It is soul destroying to watch another human being, a beautiful little child being bullied in this way.

I feel for you and your gc flowers

Grandmama Sun 21-Apr-19 20:30:12

My maternal grandmother favoured her first born - a son - all her life. Then another son was born then my mother. My mother said if she had been the second born there wouldn't have been a third child. My mother and the second son were always aware the first born was favoured (I'm not sure that my grandmother was fully aware she did favour him) and were a close pair in childhood. But I think this accounted for my mother's anxiety and depression.

Minshy Sun 21-Apr-19 19:27:31

It is abuse. It’s dreadful.

Minshy Sun 21-Apr-19 19:25:54

This has to be dealt with. The consequences go on and on. It’s absolutely dreadful. Believe me I know. I was that unfavoured child. It hurts so much. It’s unhealthy for the whole family.

ReadyMeals Sun 21-Apr-19 17:17:37

Yes, then that was unhelpful. But if a child is genuinely suffering being scapegoated then some adult really has to be there for her and make her feel special to someone or she will grow up with all sorts of self-esteem issues.

dragonfly46 Sun 21-Apr-19 17:15:07

No Readymeals it wasn't like that. For example we all used to go camping together and it was the norm that the children from each family would wash up afterwards at the ablutions. It was a great bonding session and good for the children to get to know each other but my mother would say 'Oh don't make her wash up. She can stay with me.' Consequently my DD did not get to know the other children which I was sad about as she had difficulty making friends and this was the ideal opportunity.

ReadyMeals Sun 21-Apr-19 16:52:51

But dragonfly, maybe you were not yourself scapegoating the one your mother favorited? If you were already treating your children equally then of course it would upset the balance to have your mother singling one out for favoring. Obviously we're taking the OP at face value and our comments are on the basis that the picked on child is not being treated fairly.

dragonfly46 Sun 21-Apr-19 16:26:53

There is a danger here in favouring one child to redress the balance. My mother used to do that with my eldest, the more difficult one but it just used to put my back up. I could never discipline my daughter if my mother was there as she would undermine me. Consequently it was very difficult to explain right and wrong to my DD. A lot of what she did had to be corrected and she is very stubborn.
We have a great relationship now as we have both worked on it but it was a struggle in the early days.

GrannyAnnie2010 Sun 21-Apr-19 16:11:13

I agree with Readymeals. I was the 'scapegoat', and was miserable for ages when I had to take the flak. But my maternal grandfather and paternal uncle had me as their favourite, though those two men never met. Sadly, I saw them only a few times a year and they died before I was 15. Yet I still remember their attention and made me feel more positive about myself.

ReadyMeals Sun 21-Apr-19 12:17:21

Nana69 maybe it wouldn't be so wrong of you to favor the picked-on child. It might just make the difference to her being able to build a positive view of her own worth. And it's not like the others would suffer, since I don't think there is so much emotion and jealousy surrounding a grandparent's favorite, it's usually looked on more indulgently than when a parent has a favorite

grandtanteJE65 Sun 21-Apr-19 12:03:30

You mention four children, but I am uncertain is it always the same child that she picks on?

Could you perhaps do something special with that child when you visit? If Grandma is always impartial and does special things with each child on their own, then at least your grandchild with have that joy.

minxie Sun 21-Apr-19 11:35:04

When my boy was young he had a friend who was the unliked one. He said to me once My mum doesn’t like me. I thought at the time it’s just kid talk. As the years went by I realised he was telling the truth
He spent a lot of time at my house cos we were normal (his words) He went to live with his Nan in the end as the whole family knew of this behaviour
I have no advice, just letting you know he’s not alone.
Being family though. I would talk to your daughter, as it’s a form of abuse and will shape the child’s future

Saggi Sun 21-Apr-19 11:24:26

I was the youngest of 6 and obviously not one my parents wanted or needed. The reason being that my brother was born just 13 months before me , and he apparently became the Golden Child almost immediately,according to my eldest sister. Then mum found out she was having me ( not best pleased apparently)...she had an awful pregnancy and difficult birth. But.... I never ever felt at the time growing up that they didnt want any of us... but looking back we all realised that number 5 was favoured. He never noticed (he says)...and we didn’t treat him differently ...that’s how it was. He grew up to be the most awkward..disappointing child for my parents but still didn’t matter. He also grew to be the spitting image of my dad and gets more like him. We all just gave up and let him have it all. We’re all friends ...but we see least of number 5 as he tends more towards his wife’s family.

Grammaretto Sun 21-Apr-19 11:19:25

Looking back I was guilty of being hardest on our first born. I didn't love him less but expected more from him and he was frequently blamed.
Is it possible to guide your DD to prevent that happening?
Does the unfavoured one remind her of her divorced ex?
If it's bad enough to be noticeable by others including you, I think you should offer some suggestions before it gets worse.
I am a middle child. Eldest was the favoured one IMO but she didn't think so and youngest the only boy.

Niucla97 Sun 21-Apr-19 10:27:29

My heart goes out to you. My younger son has a daughter and son now in their twenties, Granddaughter has always had to work hard and plod along but always got there, Grandson naturally clever, everything he touched 'turned to gold.' They are both entirely different personalities. He's very hard working out going person who enjoys the good life. She is very much a loner, a tomboy, football
crazy)no one at home has the slightest interest in football - this was one of her passions with her granddad.)

They were never disciplined the same GS got away with 'murder' whereas GD was punished, She idolised her granddad and was always with him. She had a very volatile relationship with her Dad. She knew what buttons to press to wind him up. She almost hated her brother with a vengeance - GOLDEN BOY! She didn't have a 'chip' on her shoulder she had a 'boulder!'

It became noticeable and people would comment that GD got all his own way. At one point she almost joined the Army just to get away from home. Looking from the inside out she didn't make things easy for herself or anyone else.

Her beloved granddad died a four years ago. It hit her so badly that she almost had a nervous breakdown last year. She ended up having counselling and my son admitted that he was so jealous of the relationship that she had with his Dad he kind of took it out on her. They are beginning to build a relationship but she doesn't make it easy. The counsellor has tried to point out to her that she doesn't actually hate her brother she just hates the things that have gone on and the 'privileges ' he had.

It certainly not easy and am sure it can scar you for life.

Ramblingrose22 Sun 21-Apr-19 10:24:46

Nana69 - I feel for you and the "unfavoured" child because I was an unfavoured child.
My mother would claim that she treated us all alike but you can't when all children have different personalities.
I expect your DD has her work cut out as a single mum looking after 4 children.
Perhaps you could start a conversation with her along those lines and tease out why she favours one of her DCs more than the others. Then you could broach the subject and express your concerns.
Be prepared for her to tell you to MYOB though!

ayokunmi1 Sun 21-Apr-19 10:24:01

Tell her gently with an example not to say is worse than saying.
Continue to do what your doing praying as well as showing the unfavored on unconditional love

Knittynatter Sun 21-Apr-19 10:09:46

Lols @Jayelld! I was thinking 17 GCs at 5 days each must take up all of your time!!! ?

Jayelld Sun 21-Apr-19 09:56:59

That was meant to be GS, 17, not GC, 17, - I only have 4 GC! smile3

Jaycee5 Sun 21-Apr-19 09:55:22

That should obviously be cues, not queues.

Jayelld Sun 21-Apr-19 09:54:46

Due to circumstances beyond my control I was the 'outsider' in a family of 7 children. I still am, but I've long since given up seeking anyone's approval or acceptance. It was/is a long hard road to walk but, IMO, if you show the 4 children equal affection it will go a long way to easing the situation. Also, if you are able, have them to stay with you for a few days during school holidays, one at a time.
I do that with my GC, 17, and have just sent the eldest GS home after a 5 day stay. I've also had my other GS, 12, staying for 5 days. Hard work but well worth it.

Jaycee5 Sun 21-Apr-19 09:54:28

I think this harms the person favoured too. My sister always compares herself favourably to other people and is unaware that she is even doing it. She will say, 'look what that woman is wearing, I would never dress like that'. I ask her what someone else's clothes have to do with how she dresses but she doesn't get it.
The child not favoured will almost certainly have confidence issues but will realise that there is something wrong to be dealt with. The favoured one may acknowledge that they were the favourite but will think that it was justified - this is called filial collusion.
What you can do is be very positive with the child who is not favoured because it is surprising how many people pick up queues from others as to how to behave towards people. I have very fond memories of a great aunt who I rarely saw but was one person who always seemed to like my sister and I equally.
Children start to behave badly if they are not favoured which then causes more problems. They may become defensive or sly or introverted and then the parent can say to people - you see what I mean. That child needs to have someone in her corner even when she does not always seem likeable.