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Grandparenting

My place or your place?

(130 Posts)
Mariana72 Wed 13-Jul-22 08:45:15

Hi. I have a brand new 6-month old grandson (first one). Everything has been great so far, the child is the son of one of my boys and her gf. We all get along and the gf is quite nice. However, they insist that if husband and I want to see the child it needs to be at their house. We live 25 miles apart. So far so good, the child was actually too young to travel to see his granparents but now he is 6 months old, the gf is back to work, my son has one month's parental leave and is alone with the child. They live in an apartment in the city and we live in a house with garden and trees by the sea in the outskirt; overall a lot cooler and more pleasant. I think it is a bit unreasonable to hold the child at home breathing car exhaust fumes on their occasional stroll outside instead of fresh clean Ocean air. Even so, we sort of accepted that visits will always be at their home (for I don't know how long?) but I am having second thoughts and quite frankly I am thinking it is such an unreasonable request, at least now that my son is free for a month and he would have all the time in the world to visit (and company huge car, gas paid by the company, all the comfort in the world). I don't want to have to drive 25 miles back and forth every time I want to see the child but I guess there is no other way and it is making me want to see less of them. Although the relationship with my son and gf is very good, there have already been a few incidents that make me fear all will not be rosey down the road. How do we navigate what seem ever increasing restrictions to see the child? Restrictions and problems with visiting us once in a while just seem to be popping up from nowhere. Sorry if this is too long and if English is maybe not perfect, but it is not my first language. Cheers and thank you. M.

Springtimerose Sun 07-Aug-22 18:58:06

Mariana72

Springtimerose

Sorry I’ve quoted the wrong message!

It's ok, I understood what you mean.

About this «It’s also not recommended for babies to spend long times in car seats when they are little as it can affect their spines as they grow.» it really makes no sense since they drove to go on holidays to a place that's a 2 and a half hours drive....

Look, it's ok and the situation is sort of on the mend now, but I just needed my son to realise that he could not talk down to or pick on me just because he is nervous or anxious for other reasons and then make me the villain in the story. I love him and his family but I don't think I deserved this and, nervous or not nervous, I do feel he needed to be told how unfair he has been with me.

Sorry, I thought the issue was were you got to se your grandson, not how your son was treating you?

In regards to the babyseat/long journeys (there’s plenty of studies on it) they likely would have stopped several times on that journey to allow time outta the seat, then a long break in between whilst they’re on holiday. For 50 miles with only a few hrs in between whilst at yours, they probably wouldn’t stop for that.

Plus with holidays, it’s something they actively choose to do iyswim?

Madgran77 Sun 07-Aug-22 18:48:25

Gabrielle56

Hmm.... This is a little tinkle rather than an alarm bell! Gf is asserting her will and your DS has absolutely no say in the matter. Mine started similarly and I've now not seen my gorgeous 3 GKs for nigh on 5 years- at ALL . Make your mind up to be compliant , obey instructions and bite.your.tongue.! Hopefully all will be well but do not underestimate how cruel and selfish the partners of sons can be. Good luck!

I think you needed to read the thread before posting that, rather than transferring your own painful situation with your DIL/son's GF on to this posters situation

Mariana72 Sun 07-Aug-22 18:36:16

Springtimerose

Sorry I’ve quoted the wrong message!

It's ok, I understood what you mean.

About this «It’s also not recommended for babies to spend long times in car seats when they are little as it can affect their spines as they grow.» it really makes no sense since they drove to go on holidays to a place that's a 2 and a half hours drive....

Look, it's ok and the situation is sort of on the mend now, but I just needed my son to realise that he could not talk down to or pick on me just because he is nervous or anxious for other reasons and then make me the villain in the story. I love him and his family but I don't think I deserved this and, nervous or not nervous, I do feel he needed to be told how unfair he has been with me.

Springtimerose Sun 07-Aug-22 18:09:43

Sorry I’ve quoted the wrong message!

Springtimerose Sun 07-Aug-22 18:08:01

Hithere

OP

That mentality can get you in a lot of trouble

Even family has boundaries that make positive relationships happen

But not everyone has the same view on family, they’ve just created their own nuclear family… so their priority is just the 3 of them.

If they both work, they won’t want to be travelling with any free time they have and frankly they shouldn’t have to. You don’t like the drive, so why would they? It’s also not recommended for babies to spend long times in car seats when they are little as it can affect their spines as they grow.

The baby will have so much stuff needed at this age too, just let it go and enjoy the time you do get to see him rather than focusing on your dislike for the visiting.

You can video call, those portal things are marvellous! You don’t have to just have in person visits.

Herefornow Wed 20-Jul-22 00:35:57

Sorry, just to check, if he's between jobs does that mean he does not in fact have a company car and paid-for gas?

Mariana72 Tue 19-Jul-22 10:15:54

Newmom101 Hi and thank you for your message and congrats on being a new mom smile . I appreciate the input of a mom a lot as you can see things us grannies maybe are not seeing clearly. My husband smokes but not a lot. That wouldn't be an issue as they themselves sometime smoke. When we visit, my husband goes out on the varanda to smoke. No dogs, no pets. Used to have a labrador retriever that we absolutely adored by after he died a few years back we decided we were not willing to go through heartbreak like that again with another one. Incidentally, if there were other problems they could clearly say so and we would try to accommodate them. My son is a tough cookie and not always easy to get along with. DIL a lot easier, at least for my personality. She is a lot easier to read for me than my own boy. He is in between jobs now and starting a very high paying but very demanding job soon, so I guess he is very nervous and hence the bad attitude and all the snappiness. This is why we have decided to give him (or them) all the space they need.

Newmom101 Tue 19-Jul-22 00:25:54

@Mariana72 Do you smokes? Oh have pets (dogs really)? Or is your house maybe not ‘baby proofed’? Just trying to think of reasons that they might not want to take a child their. We don’t visit my in-laws in their home with DC until they’re a few years old as FIL is a chain smoker and they have a huge, untrained dog. But that has been clearly explained to them.

Otherwise I don’t get it, I prefer to visit other people so we can lead whenever, rather than having to sit there waiting for them to leave when they start annoying me grin

SachaMac Sat 16-Jul-22 19:35:10

Hope all works out for you all Mariana72 I think you’re taking the right road by backing off a little.

Mariana72 Sat 16-Jul-22 09:50:52

Mandrake I totally agree and seeing (a lot) less of each other is probably what is going to happen eventually when the storm is over. We used to be at each other's house at least once every other week before the baby was born, we would sometime take them and siblings on weekends somewhere or take them out for dinner or something and there was never a problem. Maybe they tried to keep that up after the baby was born and they found it was a bit of an effort, who knows. The problem is one of communication with my son. He is extremely difficult to communicate with and always has been.
I will back off until they find themselves in a calmer spot and if it doesn't improve then it doesn't. Like I said, I have a clear conscience, I am good with whatever comes our way.

Mandrake Sat 16-Jul-22 00:00:48

I'll give you credit for not putting all the blame on your son's partner for the situation.

I tend to agree that there may be something going on that you aren't aware of. They may not wish to share it.

Regardless of the reason, you should set your own boundaries. If they want you to visit, 'I'm sorry, with no cooling in the car it's too difficult for your father to travel, so we'll have to wait for a cooler day.' Or something like, 'I'd like to have a weekend at home, so can't do this weekend. However, you are welcome to stop by if you can, I'd love to see you all.'

Maybe that will mean you see less of each other, but at least then no-one feels they are making sacrifices they don't want to make.

Doodledog Fri 15-Jul-22 23:49:28

There is an awful lot of second guessing going on on this thread. It is always dangerous to make assumptions about people's motives.

The OP's son has asked that visits should be at his house for now. That is all we know - anything else is speculation. It is up to the OP whether to go along with this and continue to visit, or not to see her grandchild. Who knows whether this will change as the grandchild gets older, or whether the OP will have burnt her boats if she opts out now. For the sake of a 25 mile drive, I know what I would be doing.

Herefornow Fri 15-Jul-22 22:11:55

I'm wondering if there isn't something else going on here... Has he been told off at work for overusing the business car for personal reasons? Perhaps he wouldn't want to tell you that because he's embarrassed his employment isn't quite as flashy as he would want you to think?

If it weren't for the month where its him alone with baby refusing to visit i would wonder if perhaps the baby's mother had a birth injury that meant she wanted to stay close to her clean clothing etc and could discretely change? She may not want you to know she's struggling with something like that. Perhaps your son is doubling down on our being his decision etc to protect his partner?

nadateturbe Fri 15-Jul-22 16:55:35

Sachamac I often tiptoe on eggshells.
Gabrielle may be wrong in this case but partners can cause problems. I've personal experience. Two GDs I sadly never got a chance to be close to.

Mariana72 Fri 15-Jul-22 15:34:15

Gabrielle56 wow! why? what makes you say such a thing? I have known her for 7 years since she was 24 years old. I have absolutely zero indication that she is a scheming little thing. Actually don't take offence, but I take your comment to be a bit patriarchal. I know my boy and for him to have "no say" in any matter it would take a real force of nature grin . I am not saying it isn't so, it might be, but I'd be very surprised.

Gabrielle56 Fri 15-Jul-22 14:29:43

Hmm.... This is a little tinkle rather than an alarm bell! Gf is asserting her will and your DS has absolutely no say in the matter. Mine started similarly and I've now not seen my gorgeous 3 GKs for nigh on 5 years- at ALL . Make your mind up to be compliant , obey instructions and bite.your.tongue.! Hopefully all will be well but do not underestimate how cruel and selfish the partners of sons can be. Good luck!

Mariana72 Fri 15-Jul-22 12:02:13

SachaMac, what you wrote is something that I will actually copy and paste somewhere where I have easy access to it. It is what I feel, word by word. Sometimes you give in and just keep giving in to keep the peace and not upset anybody and it just does not work and only makes matters worse. Thank you for being able to express this so much better than I was. M.

Mariana72 Fri 15-Jul-22 11:45:08

PernillaVanilla

I wonder what the pattern of visiting was before the baby came along? I find it strange that if there was a pattern of maybe son and DiL coming over for an afternoon or lunch or to stay for the weekend every month or so the idea hasn't been just to resume this when the baby is old enough and settled enough for it not to be difficult. I feel if you just sit tight an don't say anything there must come a time when the attractions of your home and the countryside will mean that they want to visit.

Mostly their house (because they both work), and maybe once every three months, ours. That always worked great and all was fine. Or so it seemed.

Hithere Fri 15-Jul-22 11:43:26

"I personally know, my position from the notion that I have done absolutely everything in my power to make my family a happy, safe and caring one, sometimes even at the cost of sheer exhaustion and burnout."

I am glad your son is not going the martyr route, to make everybody happy

SachaMac Fri 15-Jul-22 11:41:31

All this ‘don’t break their rules or ruffle any feathers’ is all well and good but we can’t live in constant fear of upsetting our AC. I agree we should do our best to keep the peace by not interfering unnecessarily in their lives but we shouldn’t be terrified of offering an opinion on odd occasions. We should also feel able to ask a question about their ‘rules’ or feel confident passing on a snippet of our wisdom without worrying that we will upset them & that this will lead to estrangement. I’m sure most AC don’t really expect us to be tiptoeing around on egg shells all of the time and are also quite capable of telling us if they think we have spoken out of turn without WW3 breaking out, we should just enjoy time with our families and not worry too much.

Mariana72 Fri 15-Jul-22 11:39:56

Mandrake

Mariana72, your last post sounds like you are planning to walk away from the relationship with your son altogether. Be careful making that decision as there may be no coming back from it.

There's been a few mothers walking away in these forums recently.

I am not exactly planning to do anything. None of this was my intention anyway. I was just stunned at how incredibly unyielding and uncompromising he was. Visits from now on at their house and that is that. Not much room for any plans other than 'it's my way or the highway'. I will just go on with my life and if he wants to contat and talk about this with a cool head, great, if not, great too. I am calm. Maybe unlike many other mothers I personally know, my position from the notion that I have done absolutely everything in my power to make my family a happy, safe and caring one, sometimes even at the cost of sheer exhaustion and burnout. I have a clear conscience and that gives me a lot of tranquillity. You know, when you have given your best and it still goes wrong, I mean, what can you do?

PernillaVanilla Fri 15-Jul-22 11:13:12

I wonder what the pattern of visiting was before the baby came along? I find it strange that if there was a pattern of maybe son and DiL coming over for an afternoon or lunch or to stay for the weekend every month or so the idea hasn't been just to resume this when the baby is old enough and settled enough for it not to be difficult. I feel if you just sit tight an don't say anything there must come a time when the attractions of your home and the countryside will mean that they want to visit.

Tilly8 Fri 15-Jul-22 11:09:26

Hold your own council. I think this situation will right itself - apart from, as been mentioned before, cabin fever, the child itself will start to realise that Grandma’s house is really exciting with a garden and the ocean near by. Keep relations very sweet and bide your time. Giving your opinion to them will get you nowhere.

Daisend1 Fri 15-Jul-22 11:00:00

While the child is so young ,and were it myself in this position, be inclined to be the one to travel. G C too young at present to know you lived near the ocean.

Mandrake Fri 15-Jul-22 08:10:18

Mariana72, your last post sounds like you are planning to walk away from the relationship with your son altogether. Be careful making that decision as there may be no coming back from it.

There's been a few mothers walking away in these forums recently.