Meant to say in my above post about the children, there are many things that happen to kids that they don't get a say over, such as divorce, etc. Yes, sometimes we talk about its being hard on them, particularly since they don't get a say. But no one goes around wringing their hands and crying, "Oh, dear! The children didn't get to weigh in on the divorce! The decision was made for them!"
So I understand feeling a little bit bad that the kids are denied access to their GPs or other family without their having any input. But acting as if it's unacceptable for them not to get to weigh in on this major decision? It just seems a little over the top to me.
As for Coleman's advice, it sounds good to me. There's a point where one just has to stop trying, I think, and give the younger couple - and yourself - some space and start moving on with life, etc. One of my friends who is cod from her ds and family has already done this. Another one of them should, imo, but just isn't ready yet, I guess. The third stopped too soon, imo. She didn't try a simple apology or make any effort to change her bossy ways - keeps saying she "doesn't know" what happened even though her ds made it quite clear. But that's just how I (and our other friends) see it. Of course, she has to make the decision for herself.
Iv been doing some reading on MN though, and one thing Iv seen a few times is that they don't see an apology as sincere if the gp says, "I'm sorry for whatever I did." They see that as a failure to admit to the specific wrongdoing, it seems, and an effort to brush it under the rug. They seem to have trouble believing that the gp really doesn't know what went wrong, even if gp genuinely doesn't.
So Idk if Coleman's, "I did something that hurt you... I honestly don't know what it is" would pass muster either with some young parents. It sounds sincere enough to me, but Idk how it would be received. Of course, not every young parent is the same, and neither is every cod gp. So maybe it would work for some families.