Perhaps ignorance really is bliss CrazyH ? bit off thread but when you see your adult children doing or behaving in a way the really gets your goat does anyone think and say to themselves I can really see myself or my other half there
showergelfresh an interesting question! We all love our AC, but liking is sometimes a bit harder. Lots of honest posts on here though ( refreshing). The tiptoeing around AC is at times very wearing and most of seem to have to do it. The one thing we will never know is what our AC say about us to each other or their spouses, even when we think everything is hunky dory.
I love my children but don't always agree with what they do and their life styles. Small potatoes really as they are both caring adults who are doing their best under trying circumstances. I count my blessings after reading the problems encountered by other Gransnetters. They don't hold back when they think I've done something wrong, tables turned.
What - all the time Gonegirl? Do I believe all is so hunky dory for you? No! Never the less I'm pleased for you if that is so.
Had to look up the meaning of FFS! Oh dear. Not good at all. Maybe not all is as fab as the poster tried to have us all think as angry folk tend to have trouble at large.
I think pretty much as kittylester wisely said - that her AC have traits she likes and those she doesn't like and they probably think the same about her.
I love that - very balanced which is what I shall try to adopt. Thank you for the voices of reason many of you have shown.
Well showergelfresh, I was about to write a short post on your thread about my lovely daughter, but it may have sounded 'suspicious' to you. So I won't bother, to save you the bother.
showergel your posts are really bloody nasty aren’t they? No wonder you have problems with relationships with you dc. Fortunately some of us are much more emotionally intelligent and mature,
I never get fed up treading carefully cos I don't ever feel the need to tread carefully. My eldest son and I have quite an argumentative relationship. We both tend to say what we think and end up arguing but arguing doesn't bother us. We don't fall out although we might not contact each other for a few days but that's as bad as it gets. We're very alike and not necessarily in a good way. I never argue with my younger son and never feel the need to either.
My sons are 37 and 35, and I like them as well as love them.
Son no. 1 is kind, sensitive, caring, polite, and a brilliant father. He's very much a home bird.
Son no. 2 is funny, generous, ambitious, confident, well-mannered and thoughtful.
Both sons live 1/2 a mile away from me, and 1/2 a mile from each other too. They have got completely different lives (one has children, the other son is single, never wanted children). I am immensly proud of them both.
* showergelfresh * what are you talking about? Of course my children have their faults but I know them well enough to understand where these faults come from. No one is perfect. I'm not and of course they are not. But I still like them.
If the "FFS" thing is aimed at me, I vaguely remember using that term fairly recently on GN, but can't for the life of me remember where. Sorry if it upset you.
No Chew no irony at all- just a statement of fact. Damn nasty of the OP to basically accuse those of us who like and love our dc of lying. And you’ve joined in the nastiness - well done. Bless.
Yes! From you showergel to anyone who did not answer in a negative way about their Ac. Not all of us have dysfunctional relationships with out families. Hard as that is for you to believe!
LoveOc, have you thought of suggesting that DS and DIL go to Relate? If not, the next time he complains about DIL, perhaps it would be a good idea to say, "We hear you, and we're sorry we don't have the answer. Perhaps going to Relate would help?" Even if he says, "No,' maybe he'll think about it.
It’s not dysfunctional Buffybee I love and like all my children very much, but they are not perfect, and sometimes you do have to tread carefully, so as not to rock the boat. You’re very fortunate if you never have to do that
I love my AC dearly. I consider my daughter my best friend. I think if I spent a lot of time with my son we wouldn’t get along too well, we are far too alike! But I like him and he is a very hard working, loyal husband.
I have a DD, but also three step-DDs, acquired when all were adult. It took me some time to learn to love the steps, though I liked them from first meeting. I see one very often, because she lives closest and we help with childcare regularly, and she now feels almost like a daughter. But only almost.
I wonder if the tension around deciding if we 'love' or 'like' our ACs isn't caused partly by the term itself? Our expectations of unknown As are very different from those of unknown Cs. But our feelings for and expectations of our own ACs are mixed; perhaps we can never experience them fully as adults because they were once our children. I love my DD, though she sometimes annoys me - generally because she disagrees with me!
What would be a less emotionally-charged term? 'Offspring' perhaps? We can't use the biblical term 'issue', because that word has changed its meaning to be synonymous with 'problem'. Or perhaps that makes it ideal?