I think I would drop it into conversation that you had discussed it with DIL and see what his reaction is but I would of thought his wife might of already told him either way I would step back and immerse yourself in your own life let him see you have hobbies and a social life and maybe the next time he asks for help tell him you will check your diary and get back to him.
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To ask or not to ask?
(40 Posts)Don't ask but let them know the offer is there. He's probably embarrassed that he hasn't been able to provide for "his family" and now wants to show you he can stand on his own two feet and provide for them. Men are utterly useless at admitting anything that may result in loss of face and as you've a good relationship with your DIL and see your GC then why rock the boat and jeopardise any of that?
No advise really just to say I understand totally, and find grown up children far far far more difficult that being a single parent to three young kids I seem to always say the wrong thing to one or other If I help I m interfering if I stay back and keep quiet I m asked if I m depressed or not well
I d say just hold tight and let them get on with it build on your relationship with grandchild and wait to be asked for any help he may have felt resentful of all the help he has had to have from you in the past and wants to prove he can manage his family by himself hence the ' made up ' story I would imagine your help may well be needed with the new baby but I d say wait to be asked ( hard as it is)
Good luck x
Maybe your son just wants his home and family to himself and needs a little space, he wet to Uni a and then lived abroad for 5 years and although you visited each other he had plenty of time on his own and new visits were limited.
Now he returns to the UK, first of all he lives with you and a new baby arrives so big changes in his life. Then he buys his own home and his MIL comes to stay for a long period and you can visit anytime. So he has gone from a carefree life abroad with new adventures, romance, interesting friends, new cultures and then back to the uk, family responsibilities, relatives near by and MIL visiting for a long period plus the same old culture and not a lot new and exciting. Grey skies don't help.
Now another baby on the way. You say it is a mess, maybe he feels it is a bit of a mess. I think you represent here and the old life and he is not 100% happy living back here in the old life with family ties.
Maybe ask him if he misses living abroad etc in a conversational way. Even is this is not the reason, he is not happy.
Give him some space, try to visit your grandchild when he is not there.
the cultural thing may be more complex than you think though- maybe some kinds of help are fine, others not, or more likely there is a general rule about not offering help, but a more important rule says 'don't upset other people- especially older people/parents' and your DIL was trying not to upset you. Can you research the culture or maybe talk to an unrelated person from that culture?
Thanks for your thoughts - I'll keep Mum (excuse the pun!). I never expected parenting to get harder with time. If my dear Mum was still alive she'd have helped me through this, but since she died I feel even more alone as a single parent than I ever did when my son was young. Thanke for listening and responding everyone.
I would say that as long as you have a relationship with your grandchildren, then definitely keep quiet in order to protect it. Asking will more than likely spiral into confrontation. May even cause trouble between your son and his wife, as they have each said different things. Sadly, many grandparents end up being deprived of a relationship with their grandchildren, when one or other of the parents appears to have a problem, which they seem unable or unwilling to verbalise.
There must be something more to this that has made your DS turn so unkind towards you. Have you shown any concern or disapproval or anything, however minor, that could be construed as regret that he has married a girl from a different culture? Could it be that?
Why would he change from your loving son unless something had triggered the change? Does he perhaps wish to be more independent and establish himself with his own family unit? It rather sounds as if he wants a less-close relationship and if I were you I would let him have that.
Just keep calm and affectionate and don't ask too many questions or make too many requests.I certainly would not probe the question in your OP.
I know - it's walking on egg-shells time but you want to keep them in your life and it has to be on their terms really. Adult children can be VERY tricky to deal with. I know from my own DD! Least said, soonest mended.
Perhaps it's a pride thing. You have clearly been more than generous and kind. Now he has a job, maybe your son wants to prove he can provide for his family.
I wouldn't ask, given time he will probably explain. They must think a lot of you to want to remain so close. Lovely to have a grandchild so near and get on with DIL.
Better to bide your time and hope things blow over I think. No point in risking making things worse - and he is likely to become defensive, and how would that help?
Are you on your own? I only ask because it is possible that if you are, then minor glitches with offspring can take on a greater importance. Just a thought.
And I agree with Ana and PRINTMISS which just proves Obieone's point!
And I am in the category of 'do not ask'. It will sort itself out in good time, if you see your family often then it is something that will in due course either come to a head or blow over. don't go looking for trouble.
I'd advise not asking. Your son obviously made the 'culture difference' excuse up and will probably become defensive and/or aggressive if challenged.
I think you have to accept the situation and get on with it as best you can.
In an ask/dont ask situation on gransnet, about 3/4 will say dont ask, and 1/4 will say ask.
I am usually in the ask category. I would ask.
I have one grown up offspring (son 30) who I brought up on my own, with the help of my parents, to whom he was very close. After university son went abroad for 5 years, 3 different countries, including China. He returned to UK 2 years ago with wife and baby on the way. Whilst abroad he and wife came to UK each summer for 6 weeks, and we visited them wherever they were too. We always got on really well, enjoyed out holidays with them and there stays with us in the UK. However, things have gone completely pear shaped since they came to live here. They had to live with us to start with (no jobs, baby on the way) - we didn't mind, and things were bearable (DIL a bit tricky, but understandable under the circumstances). When baby born we offered them out holiday cottage, as it was winter, which is attached to our house. They continued to come to us every evening for supper, despite having completely self contained accommodation. Eventually son got job and they bought house nearby (7 mins by car). Early this year son told me to stop offering to help because in DIL's culture offering help is offensive. I found this really hurtful and it has bothered me ever since. I asked DIL to explain this cultural issue to me so I could understand, and she said it didn't exist (no surprise there, all culture help each other). This has left me very unsure how to behave towards them. Thankfully grand daughter is always pleased to see me and affectionate. My son however clearly finds me a bit of a nuisance, he's off hand, makes little effort when holding a conversation and generally looks bored by my presence.
They have had DIL's mother staying with them in a tiny house since June, and she's not returning til September. My son can't converse with MIL because she doesn't speak English, so it is his perfect excuse not to get involved with her.
The question - should I ask him why he made up the rubbish about offering help being offensive, or should I leave well alone? After months of putting up with his off hand behaviour, my conclusion is I don't like my own son very much, and I don't like me for admitting it. I'm worried about becoming estranged from them and losing touch with grand daughter - and on top of everything another baby is now on its way. It's a mess and I feel a mess.
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