K.W. asks from Rowlett, TX on June 09, 2009
My Mother Not Wanting to Deal with Her Own Grandaughter
My husband and I are having some issues about my mother not wanting to really deal with her first and only grandchild. She used to talk about how she couldn't wait to have a grandchild and how excited she was to become a grandma. Well my daughter is 16 months old and within the past 3-4 months my mother has not seemed to want to spend time with her alone. She will be more than willing to come over to the house to see her and me and her go to their house, but never does she want to keep her over night, even though she has a whole room set up for my daughter. She bought a crib, diaper changer, clothes, same blanket she uses at night, pj's, diapers, I mean she has everything my daughter needs at her house. For example, she had told me last week she wanted to have a sleepover that weekend and when I mentioned it, she already had something to do, also, today, my daughter goes to daycare about 5-10 min. away from their house and she said she'd pick her up, but she didn't have her an apple, to explain the apple thing, my daughter started daycare 3 weeks ago and she is always sooo hungry when I pick her up, anyways so we give her an apple in the car so she doesn't cry the whole way home. So anyways, she didn't want to pick her up from daycare because she didn't have her an apple and her excuse for not wanting to keep her at night is that she is worried she won't sleep or she'll cry because she's not used to sleeping in that crib!! I know this is long and I could keep it going longer, but my mother just seems like it's a burden for her to watch her own grandaughter alone and by herself. Does anyone have any suggestions on what we should do or say, my husband thinks we just shouldn't even accomodate her when she wants us to come over to their house, instead of coming here and picking her up just for the day! By the way, we chose what city we were going to buy a house in so we could be close to my mother because she was upset and mad that we were going to look at a city closer to my husband's parents rather than her and told us if we moved 30 min. away she wouldn't be able to help out as much because it would be too far of a drive! Please any advice! It's my own mother and I dont' know what to do!!
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S.H. answers from Dallas on June 10, 2009
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C.R. answers from Dallas on June 10, 2009
I am a mother of ten, and grandmother of nine, and eight of those grandchildren have been at my house since Saturday, spending the week with me. My house is loud, messy, and we have gone through a TON of groceries!
That said, there has been a time or two when my daughters have gotten a bit upset with me for not dropping everything and watching their children.
I know that's not what you are saying, but your daughter is not very old, and your mothers concerns are fairly valid. I don't like to watch the babies of my children who will cry, get mad because they 'don't have an apple' or don't sleep all night. I've done my time, in fact, we have an adopted not quite two year old, so I'm still doing my time in that area. I'm older, and at night, I want my sleep.
I suggest you remember that you're the mom, and grandma is not, and she does not have to babysit or keep your child overnight. I'm going to guess that if you give your baby a year or so, once she sleeps all night and runs beaming when she sees her grandma, that grandma is going to LOVE keeping her overnight and all the time. Give the baby a chance to grow up a bit. As we grandmas get older, we get creaky and sore and it's harder to keep a little one.
Let grandma learn to enjoy her in your presence, be nice about it all and understand she has the right to say no, and I expect this will all change very, very soon.
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C.O. answers from Dallas on June 09, 2009
I don't have a lot of advice, but maybe an idea. Could you go stay at your mom's house too the first time your daughter does to see how she does in the new environment? Maybe your mom would feel more comfortable after she sees how your daughter handles it. Worth a try but I realize that may not fix the problem.
You could also try talking to your mom about how you are trying to raise a child who is resilient and flexible and try to enlist her help to show your daughter that not everyone does everything the exact same way, but that these differences are okay and that you all love her. Maybe she will respond to that?
I wish I had some better ideas!
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S.M. answers from Dallas on June 10, 2009
Please do not keep your mother from your daughter! This is punishment for both of them, especially your little girl. The grandparent/grandchild connection and relationship is a very special one and normally gets stronger and stronger as time goes by IF they interact enough for this to happen. It sounds like you and your husband have some expectations about when and how much your mother "should" be seeing your daughter based on some earlier conversations. Either there was/is a communication gap or for some reason your mother is reluctant to do more than she already is--right now. A sensitive non-confrontational conversation with your mom is in order to let her know how you feel and for you to find out about the situation from her perspective. Is there some reason you need your mom to keep your daughter overnight or pick her up from daycare other than you and your husband just wanting her to? Were there agreements that she would do these things? Maybe she doesn't feel that she can adequately care for your daughter on her own for some reason. One thing to strongly consider is that she may simply not have the energy to keep up with such a little one. I am a grandmother and dearly love each and every one of my grandchildren; however, health issues and lack of energy have played a huge part in how much/when time I can devote to them. As they get older it gets easier for all concerned but again, close and strong relationships are built over time so PLEASE do not keep your mother and daughter apart!
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V.P. answers from Dallas on June 10, 2009
In reading your history, it sounds like your daughter is going through a difficult time. In the past 2 months, you've listed several requests dealing with her screaming, hitting, biting, starting daycare, having an ear infection, and a possible allergic reaction to the antibiotic they gave her.
Based on your mom's history of setting up a whole room, offering to watch your daughter, and picking her up from daycare, it sounds like she wants to be involved (more than some other grandmothers out there). She may realize that your daughter is already having some difficulties, and needs to have you and your husband close. Kids all go through stages... sometimes, when things are going well, you can help them spread their wings with overnight stays, and days when you've forgotten the apple. But if she's already having all of the rest of these problems in the last 60 days, your mom probably realizes that this is not that time.
I love the first reply you got, and would try those ideas. Then I would just be patient, and wait for a better time in your daughter's disposition.
Good luck!
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K.P. answers from Dallas on June 09, 2009
I don't know the best way to say this. Maybe you expect too much out of your mom. It's your job to pick your child up from daycare, keep her on the weekends, etc. I know it would be nice for your mom to offer to do some of these things, but it isn't necessarily her responsibility. Grandparents should be just that. They should be able to get the kids hyped up on sugar and send them home with their parents for the night... not have to give them a bath and get them ready for school in the morning. Know what I'm saying? They say absence makes the heart grow fonder. Give her some time and some space, and I bet before long she's begging for your little girl to spend the day with her.
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D.C. answers from Dallas on June 12, 2009
Perhaps your mother has had an incident of falling or forgetfulness that scares her and causes her to worry about her ability to care for her grandaughter safely. Fear and embarrassment may have kept her from confiding in you. I wouldn't push it. Continue to spend time with her and your daughter jointly--even a sleepover--and maybe you will find out her reasoning. She may even be afraid that she hasn't taken care of a baby in so long she has forgotten how.
Remember K., your life is now all about your daughter, but your mother is a person also.
BTW---Why is your daughter in Daycare if you don't have a job?
Also it sounds to me like you gave up ten years for new LR furniture. I'm not the first to try to tell you this, but I will be more blunt. You and your husband need to grow up.
God bless you.
D.
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E.C. answers from Dallas on June 10, 2009
I think you really are expecting too much from your mother. I had to learn this with my first. I had really high expectations from both of my parents that they could never fill. Because in the end I am the mother and of course my children will be my first priority. Your mother has her own life; so she may not feel like staying up all night to care for her grandchild. She is older than you and you get so tired. I always felt like I was burdening my mom if I asked her to take my baby for the weekend and always looked at is a favor not an expectation. If it makes you feel better, you could confront her about it because maybe she scared that she may do something wrong. Who knows!
A.S. answers from Lubbock on June 10, 2009
Im sorry things arent working out the way you imagined.I would just focus on you and your little family and not worry about it.Maybe it was more stressful on her than she thought it would be.Toddlers can create a lot of stress especially since she hasnt had one in a long time.Maybe she just wants to enjoy her without the stress of having to deal with the diper changes or crying.She is grandma afterall and not mama maybe she just wants all the good and no bad.She is under no obligation to keep your daughter overnight or without you there.maybe it makes her nervous.I think that you should just sit down and talk to her and ask her what is going on and explain that it is upsetting you.I know mothers can be frustrating trust me when we had our son my mom was going to move here but I acually ask her not to because I thought she would try to control everything we did and that we would never get along.She still puts me on a guilt trip about it everytime we visit.hang in there!!
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