10 answers

Adult Daughter

I have a very weird problem. My mid-seventy aged mother is adopting a 2 and 3 year old foster child. I thought after my mother retired she would finally have time for me and my children (teenagers now) but obviously the toddlers are more in need of her attention. I feel awful for being jealous, so what would you all do?

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Stop being jealous! She may be making a large and very real difference in the lives of less fortunate kids.

More Answers

C., is your mom joshing you? Agencies don't adopt children out to mid-seventy year olds. I don't believe they would even allow her to foster toddlers at her age. If you are seeing kids at her house, maybe they are the neighbor kids hanging around.

D.

1 mom found this helpful

I would be more worried and concerned than jealous. Does she just want to adopt or is she actually adopting them? I can't imagine any agency allowing a woman of her age to adopt such young children. Who will take care of them when she passes? You? If the adoption does happen, then welcome them into the family b/c there is nothing else you can do about it. Your mom may think that since you are gown with your own children and they are more or less grown, you don't need her. Is she type that needs to feel needed? I'm sorry I don't have more of an answer for you. I understand how you feel. I wish you all the best.

1 mom found this helpful

How about connecting with the little ones yourself? You might find a whole new dimension to life, and a new and meaningful way to connect with/assist your mother. Might be worth considering.

Is she fostering them, or adopting them? I find it unusual that any agency would allow an adoption to go through at your mother's age...

I agree with some of the previous people in that maybe you should try to see the brighter side to this. That these children will liven up all your lives not be the end of it. Also do teenagers really care much for you let alone their grandmother?

As to some of the post saying she is to old to adopt... seriously? My grandmother (my kids great grandma) is in her mid-seventies but takes care of a lot! She is getting another masters degree, does foster/adopt several children, daycare, cares for her pain of a husband and so much more! Just because people age does NOT mean life is over! How depressing would that be? One day we will all be that age and think back on is your life over???

I wish you all the best and hope that everyone turns out happy and fulfilled for the experience!

Do you mean actually adopting as in paperwork and going to an adoption agency for approval? If so, I doubt they'd allow her to adopt at her age. I assume you mean "taking in" rather than "adopting" some kids. Maybe their parents are out working all day and so she's going to be a babysitter to those kids until the parents come home and take over. My mother's in her mid-seventies and she does a pretty good job with my toddler whenever I need to run over for some emergency groceries or have a flat tire emergency. There's a big difference between allowing an elderly parent to be a temporary caretaker to needy kids and expecting an agency to allow her to raise them for the next eighteen years (something which probably won't happen unless she has incredibly good genes and lives that long). You should not feel jealous. You can all spend time together, and maybe your teens will enjoy playing with the toddlers. This could be a good hands-on "tough love" lesson for them if they are thinking about having kids or not practicing safe sex. I'm sure that if someone like teen mom Bristol Palin had known how hard it is to care for kids, she would have thought about using protection, so this could be a big eye-opener. Who knows, maybe your kids can learn how to care for toddlers so they can become teen babysitters in the neighborhood and earn their own money so they can save up for a car. Nothing bad can come out of this as long as the teens are being SUPERVISED when they are around the tots.

Stop being jealous! She may be making a large and very real difference in the lives of less fortunate kids.

It a really hard thing... if she truly is adopting them, though (it does seem unusual that the agency would allow that), try to accept that and welcome them into your life, and hopefully your teenagers can develop a relationship with the children as well. It never is a bad thing to have more family IMO. Our son only has one grandparent left and she's in Montana. He never even met my parents, as they were both gone before he was born. I would love to even have the opportunity for him to have a relationship like that, even if it is not the ideal.

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