Crazy Grandmother

Updated on September 24, 2013
L.S. asks from Louisville, KY
10 answers

My two beautiful granddaughters, 9 and 8, live with their father. I have watched them three days a week, plus have sleep-overs with them and have done so since they were born. Their father's mom watches them two days a week. She is an overly involved mom to her son and forces herself on him and the girls whenever she wants, which is several times a week. She has no life with her husband, which is part of the problem. Since my daughter divorced their father, she has decided that she has a say in all things related to the girls, and their father will not stand up to her, even if he strongly disagrees. If he disagrees with her, she will cry and guilt him until she gets her way. She takes them to get their hair cut, whether they need it or want it. She gives them no privacy AT ALL. She takes them to the doctor, whether they need it or not and she lies or exagerates about any symptoms when she talks to the doctor. (She was a nurse at some point, and I honestly think she has some weird form of Munchausen by Proxy.) She tried to tell the girls they are sick and gives them medicine. They are quite healthy, and the doctor told their mother that he had started to suspect that their was a problem with the grandmother. Now to the heart of the problem - the oldest child cries almost every day because she wants to live with me. The main reason is because she and her little sister cannot stand being with the other grandmother. They even cried after school one day because their father had given his mom permission to pick them up after school, when they were originally supposed to come home with me after school. (Their father works until anywhere from 6pm to 7pm.) I went to the school to say hi to them and tell them about the change of plans, and shockingly, the other GM asked if they would rather go with me, and they said, "yes". Tears dried up immediately when they were allowed to come with me. They are afraid to talk to their dad about this because she is his mother, and he gets so frustrated because he knows what will happen if he tried to oppose his mom. Any advice would be appreciated.

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So What Happened?

WOW. You moms are brutal. Yes, my daughter deserves all the bashing she has gotten, but she is back home now - permanently. Remember, you can't possibly relate unless you are in the middle of the situation under the same circumstances. Some of you said to "Back Off". Not possible - if you knew children you loved dearly were at risk would you back off? And, yes, the other grandmother isn't just annoying, she is nuts. Here are the most recent developments. Found out that she had been checking the youngest for a fever before she can even say "Good morning". She has taken this same child to a different walk-in clinic NINE times in the past year, even though she has been told repeatedly to take them to their pediatrician (most recently because she was tired - because she didn't get enough sleep and she insisted she get a blood test for mono.) The other night she gave the youngest some cough medicine, but went up one level in the dose. This poor little girl went and read the label, freaked out and was afraid she was going to die, because she had been given too much medicine. Since that day, she has developed an obsession with germs. She washes her hands at least 15 times per day, is afraid to dry them because there may be germs on the towel. Even after washing her hands, she is afraid to touch anything that will go in her mouth because there may be germs on her hands still. She cries for hours sometimes because she is so frightened. I attribute most of this to the grandmother always trying to make her think she is sick. She will force her to take medicine, whether she needs it or not. If the child refuses, she tells her it is "required". She has started giving them small junk gifts and tells them if they aren't nice to her they will have to give the gift back (for example, a miiniature salat shaker shaped like a cat). She also constantly bad-mouths their mother. Their mom has her faults, but she is still their mother and this is a no-no.

The girls' father has developed a horrible drinking problem, and is passing out almost every night, leaving the girls with NO supervision. They will try to wake him, and he cannot be woken up or if partially roused he spouts nonsense. These girls are exhausted because they aren't getting to bed on time because they may as well be at home alone. Thank God there hasn't been a fire or some such disaster in the home. They get very scared sometimes, especially the youngest.

In an ideal world, I could just say, "let their parents work it out" and turn a blind eye to what is happening. What do you say to an 11-yr old girl when she says that she feels like her other grandmother has taken her childhood away. (And, yes, the oldest child is especially insightful, I would say exceptionally so.)

BTW, custody was not court=ordered. When my daughter went to California the first time, she asked her ex to take the girls until she came back because she thought they would be in good hands. He sent papers to her there and she was told she had to sign them or the girls wouldn't be able to start school. She had not intended to permanently give up custody, and didn't even realize that she was signing a document with pages intentionally omitted.

So, if there is anyone out there that can offer constructive suggestions and not be critifal of a past that no one can change at this point it would be greatly appreciated. I know how horrible my daughter's behavior has been and do credit most of this situation to her and have let her know exactly how I feel about what she has donne.. I am not blind and I am not stupid. I just know that I can't change the past. I can only deal with the present and the future.

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OK - the big question on everyone's mind is where is my daughter. About four years ago, she went to California to pursue a love interest. She was only going to be gone a short time, and asked her ex-husband to keep the girls until she got back. While she was gone, he drew up custody papers whereby he was given sole custody. She ignorantly thought that this was temporary as well. Since that time, she has spent some of her time here and some in California. I know if they were my kids, nothing could tear me away. She definitely has problems, but she loves her girls and they love her. She has completed the papers to file for custody, but hasn't filed them yet. She has talked to her ex until she is blue in the face, but he thinks that it is because she doesn't like his mom, and tunes her out. (Who can blame her - the nutjob came to her house every morning and if my daughter didn't answer the door, she would go around the whole house banging on windows until she was let in. The woman is relentless.) Anyway, I agree that parents should be raising their own kids. My involvement is to watch them while dad is at work MWF and sleepovers when they ask. I have always tried to stay out of parenting issues. But when the other GM is doing something that is harmful to them, isn't it my responsibility to say something? What if something happened to them and I had said nothing? I am trying my best to just listen and teach them some coping skills. All kids have to deal with something. I think a parent's job is to prepare them to be happy, productive adults. When they talk to me about things that are bothering them, I try to give them the best advice I can, which usually is, "if you can't change the situation, you have to learn to be happy in spite of it".

Featured Answers

S.L.

answers from New York on

ask the Dr. to document everything and give his opinions in writing to the father, it might help. Ask teachers to document anything they see that is inappropriate, complaining about the girls' illnesses or the girls mother for example. I guess you could try telling the girls that you feel sorry for the other grandmother, than she is a bit sick and cant help the strange things she says and does. Maybe find an appropriate book about mental illness they can relate to, even if it is about a grandmother with dementia they may relate to the fact that grandma seems "not right"

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T.M.

answers from Tampa on

Why aren't the parents (your daughter and former son-in-law) raising their own kids? This sounds like an epic fail on their part as parents. It sounds like the controlling GM is just a symptom of the real problem...the parents. The parents need to get their acts together and actually parent their own children rather than leaving the parenting to the two grandmothers.

ETA: Per your SWH, no wonder he got custody of the girls. Your daughter put her own interests in front of the needs of her kids and basically abandoned them to go after a new man. I understand that she loves the girls, but that doesn't mean that she is a good parent. I understand the other GM is annoying, but at least she is showing an interest in their well being...their own mother sure didn't when it counted.

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V.P.

answers from Columbus on

Why are you worried about something happening to them? Have I missed something? She sounds irritating, not dangerous. And honestly, you're coming across to me here as also pretty "involved" in their lives, perhaps to compensate for the failures of your daughter. And I do find it hard to believe they don't want to hurt dad's feelings complaining about his mother - they may have reasons for not wanting to tell him, but she is their grandmother first, not his mother, and most kids that age aren't quite that insightful.

She can't be all that bad when she offered for them to come with you when they cried. She recognized that their feelings came first. The way you tell these things smacks of a one sided perspective. If you think children don't try to pit one adult against another, you need to think again. If I were spending three days a week and sleepovers with a grandmother and two days with another, I would want a little more stability, too, by picking one place to stay all the time. My grandmother was generous and kind and sweet, far more than my mother because she could send me home at the end of the day and wasn't responsible for the hard stuff, like making sure my homework was done and making me clean my room. I would have picked her over my parents, too. And maybe the other grandmother is a little stricter than you and disciplines more like their father (since she raised him). So you are the x factor and, thus, more attractive. I don't see anything here that points to Munchausen by Proxy or her being crazy.

Sorry, I think you need to back off.

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J.W.

answers from St. Louis on

If the father and his mother are so awful how did they get custody? Seems to me whatever you think you see the court thought it was better than your daughter. Thing is since your daughter can't get custody you rocking the boat is likely to get you cut off, not his mother, so leave it alone.

Perhaps work on your daughter getting her act together so she can at least get partial custody back.

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D..

answers from Miami on

Your daughter made her choice. It was to enjoy another man more than deal with the hardships of being a mother. I'm sorry to be blunt.

Your son-in-law will have to either get a backbone, which seems unlikely, or his daughters will have to put up with their pushy grandmother until they are older teens. THEN they will have nothing to do with her. Once they are out of his house, they will probably never see her again.

What you need to do is be a listening ear, say you understand but they have to talk to their father about the problems. Tell them that you don't want him to decide that they can't be with you, so you can't fuss at him. But that they can ALWAYS get the load of their chests by talking to you.

I think that you do stand a chance of being banned from these childrens' lives if you don't back off of being put in the middle. The girls will eventually learn that they can stand up for themselves and the grandmother will eventually become ineffectual. Keep giving them lots of love and they will be your grandkids forever.

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L.R.

answers from Washington DC on

Please add to your post because I have no idea, after reading it, where the girls' mother -- your daughter -- really stands in all this! She is mentioned twice that I can see -- once when you refer to how the other GM got crazy after the divorce, and a second time when you refer to the fact the doctor told mom that he or she is concerned about other GM. Otherwise no mention of mom's actions in this picture. You mention that the girls talk about living with YOU -- not with mom.

Is there 50-50 joint custody? It sounds more like the dad has 100 percent custody but it's not mentioned. What does your daughter say and do about this situation? Does she stand up to MIL? Does she stay out of it entirely, saying "It's his mom and his problem"? It would help us to know.

I agree with you that the other GM sounds extremely controlling and, if she is medicating kids without reason, is a danger to them; however, it's your daughter, the mom in this picture, who needs to be talking to her ex, dealing with her ex-MIL, getting the pediatrician involved and probably also getting a good custody attorney involved here. The giving of medication and taking the girls to the doctor could be key; I would want to know if I could change the custody and visitation agreement so it specifies that ONLY mom or dad takes the girls to any doctor, ever, and only mom or dad can administer medication; that way, when GM does it, it's a violation of a court agreement and mom can yank those kids back home and tell the court. Not sure if a custody agreement can achieve all that but it would be worth asking. I would hope a good lawyer could find ways to legally limit GM's contact with these kids.

It's important to know that the girls are getting old enough that very soon they will rebel and lash out at other GM's controlling ways. You can be there for them then, so keep up your positive support now. But please don't ever badmouth other GM or talk about how awful she is. That will confuse and upset them and make them feel their loyalties are being torn. Yep, other GM is going way too far, but don't trash her no matter how tempting it is. Just be there for the girls but also for dad (who may be overwhelmed and totally cowed by his mother, and probably always has been, and doesn't know how to change) and for your own daughter --though I'm not clear what her role is in all this.

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M.K.

answers from Columbus on

Unfortunately, the chances of the father getting a backbone are zero to none!! My husband is like this with his parents, especially his mother. Most the time I've just ignored her but when necessary, I've had no problem standing up to her. Especially if it involves my children!!

If I were you, I would start documenting everything and have your daughter take all the iinformation to a lawyer. Although, I'm not really sure where she is in this picture - have you talked to her about it and then in turn, have her talk to her ex-husband? Sounds to me like something needs to be done!!

Good luck!!

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S.H.

answers from Santa Barbara on

I totally agree with Tracy M.

The parents need to raise their children. The grandparents need to step back. You and the other grandmother are way too involved. Where is the mother?

2 moms found this helpful

T.S.

answers from San Francisco on

Oh God when your granddaughter cries you tell her very firmly that she needs to talk to her daddy, HE is her parent, not you, and not the other grandma. Step back, this is not your business and not within your boundaries. If his mom is a controlling woman well, that sucks but there's nothing you can do about it.
Unless those girls are being abused leave it be, otherwise you're just making things harder for them (I've seen this kind of thing in my own family, so I know.)
Where is your daughter? Is she not involved at all?

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L.S.

answers from Louisville on

I am responding to my own post. I agree with Doris Day. My daughter put a man and her own happiness ahead of the happiness of her own children. It is absolutely appalling. I also agree that the father will probably never stand up to his mother. She cleans his house, does the laundry, etc., as well as watching the girls two days a week. The reason we watch the girls is he cannot afford to pay for child care for two kids. (But I wouldn't give up the time I have spent with them for anything!) The reason the doctor will speak with me about the girls is their father wrote a letter authorizing me to seek medical treatment for them if needed,and discuss all medical matters with the doctor. My oldest granddaughter said that you can't really explain to someone what other GM is like. You just have to spend a few hours with her to get it. And to the person who asked if they missed something - GM is medicating kids unnecessarily, always telling them there is something wrong with them or they are sick when they are not, and LYING ABOUT SYMPTOMS TO DOCTOR. She does this to get attention. She tells anyone who will listen, including teachers, administrators and parents, what a martyr she is because she takes care of the kids and they have this or that illness. She also bad-mouths their mother to them for hours. No matter my daughter's problems, that is wrong.

And since when is simply spending time with your grandkids meddling or interfering with the parent's business? I spent a lot of time with both sets of grandparents, and benefitted greatly from it. Their father respects me and has even told the girls that out of every one in the family, I am the only one that can be relied on. I only give advice, very sparingly, when he asks. I am just looking for a way to help my granddaughters cope with a situation that is causing them a great deal of distress. And my oldest granddaughter is insightful enough to not hurt her father by talking about his mother in a bad way. But, she is so frustrated now that hopefully she will tell him how she feels. We talked about that a lot when she spent the night a couple of nights ago. I told her that he is her father and that I am just a grandparent. She must talk to him about this. That is probably the only way things will improve for her. And when Dad picked her up, she still cried and said she didn't want to leave. I had to practically force her out to the car. That broke my heart. Dad sent me a pic later of her smiling and said, "All Better".

Doris Day - You are not being blunt. You are just being honest, and I appreciate your candor.

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