My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Here are some suggested organisations that offer expert advice on special needs.

SN children

MIL wants to celebrate important wedding anniversary with big family get together in antiques infested chintzy country hotel. This want work with madly active 2.5 YO DS will it?

108 replies

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 14:50

We live abroad but will begoing back to Uk this summer for a few weeks and renting a family friendly apartment in London so we can see family and friends and manage DS n safe space,continue with routine etc. (DS NEEDS routine or turns impossible. Possible ASD issues, being investigated. Not good in social situations at all,we don't/can't do restaurants etc yet, bad sleeper etc).


MIL wants us all to attend big family get together at country hotel several hours away. Spindly antique tables with china vases of flowers at grab height. Piles of cushions and curtains to climb and pull. Breakables everywhere. All very exquisite and hair curlingly posh. Well heeled older people sipping sherry in quiet peace. Croquet on lawn. Fine dining with tablecloths and silver,mlnen, glassware etc.

DS is 2 now but I can't see him being any less prone to destruction, climbing, running about, letting off wild shrieks etc by the summer. WIBU to say sorry we just can't do this and please come over for a nice lunch with us instead where we can manage DS? Or maybe just send DH up for the meal and overnight gathering?

It's sad we won't see the whole family but I don't see how to manage it. And if its an evening meal DS will be in bed and one of us will have to stay up in rom with him missing the meal anyway.

OP posts:
TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 14:50

Sorry typos. Bloody iPad. In rush.

OP posts:
HanneHolm · 10/02/2013 14:54

cant you rent a series of interconnecting cottages with a pool?

they often have catering available.

Or the lovely natural retreats places on the beach at cornwall

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 14:55

Unfortunately we have no choice over the location. It's a tiny village with no other accommodation and they want THIS hotel as it is important to them.

OP posts:
HanneHolm · 10/02/2013 14:56
HanneHolm · 10/02/2013 14:57

youll have to go then

HanneHolm · 10/02/2013 14:57

just send H

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 14:58

Looks lovely but they don't want to go to Cornwall, they want to go to this particular hotel in a tiny village near Nottingham.

OP posts:
Ragwort · 10/02/2013 15:00

What does your DH say? I would suggest he goes on his own and you arrange a separate lunch or similar where you can meet up with the ILs and have another, smaller, celebration. I can't understand why anyone thinks this sort of occasion is appropriate for young children Hmm.

Or is there anyone you can leave DS with if you both go?

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:00

Guess it will have to be DH. Parents of mad 2.5 year old toddlers, would you think it would be do-able? I don't think it is fair to expect DS to manage to spend 48 hours in a quiet place filled with breakables being quiet, he is too small to understand and I can't carry or hold him 24/7.

OP posts:
HanneHolm · 10/02/2013 15:01

you have to think of enjoyment - yours and everyone elses. Just go and visit a friend instead?

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:01

DS never been left with anyone else; we live abroad so no family here, has possible ASD and is still BF.

OP posts:
BerthaTheBogCleaner · 10/02/2013 15:01

Say thank you for the invitation, very kind, but we don't want to do that with ds. (V. important to say "we don't want to" - there is no arguing with that).

Obv it would be nice if MIL said - ooh, what would suit you better then? But if she's planned it already then all you can do is say no, it won't work for us, we do hope you have a nice time.

We have friends with children who live abroad. They used to run themselves ragged by travelling around to see everyone when they came back to the UK. Then they started saying "we will be at x location for x dates, if you'd like to visit, let us know when". They do the travelling from abroad, we all travel within the uk to see them. They get to see the people who really care about them. It works well!

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:03

No friends there, is tiny village hundreds of miles from London. No other accommodation there.
We used to live in London, have friends there hence staying there as a base when visit UK. Would have to hire car and drive there and stay for weekend. Feel terrified at thought of it.

OP posts:
TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:04

Bertha, that's what we are doing. Hiring flat in London and asking people to drop round. Impossible to drive about staying with people especially with toddler. Easier to have base and play host and go out/stay in on our own terms.

OP posts:
BerthaTheBogCleaner · 10/02/2013 15:07

Btw, I'd have done it with dc1 (quiet calm child) but not with dc2 - I'd have spent the whole time taking him off somewhere else to keep him busy/happy/stop him disturbing people, and it would have been hard work and lonely. And no one ever thought he had asd, he was just being a 2yo.

I'd also object to "send dh by himself" actually. You're presumably having a holiday? Not really ok to spend a couple of days of your holiday alone with your hard-work toddler, is it? If it was my mum having a primadonna all-about-me-never-mind-the-children family party I wouldn't expect to leave dh alone with the kids during our holiday so I could go.

BerthaTheBogCleaner · 10/02/2013 15:09

Feel terrified at thought of it

Just Say No. Say it soon, so MIL gets used to the idea.

If your ds does have asd, this is not a problem that is going to go away as he gets older.

DarrellRivers · 10/02/2013 15:12

Oh, what a shame if you and your son didn't go
It sounds important to your in-laws, can you not just go, grit your teeth and survive for 48 hours.
Your attendance matters to them and it sounds like there are some sentimental reasons they have chosen this hotel

FashionFail · 10/02/2013 15:17

Which village (Nosy from Notts)

ChippyMinton · 10/02/2013 15:24

Nottingham is do-able for a day-trip from London, if you are happy to hire a car and spend several hours travelling each way with your DS. Could you arrange to go along for a few hours to see everyone, maybe for the afternoon? Might be a reasonable compromise?

Fishlegs · 10/02/2013 15:30

Will there be any other children going?

TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:31

TBH even driving more than an hour or two with DS is going to be very challenging. I can grit my teeth all I like. But it won't change the fact that not only DS but everyone else in that hotel will have a very bad time of it. I will have to spend the entire time removing him and standing outside with him because he is noisy and he screams and he won't stop running and exploring and if I try to hold his hand or put him in a chair he will wriggle go floppy, bang his head and scream. How can I do that for a while weekend in a quiet country hotel? He won't be able to manage an evening meal,mi don't even think he could manage breakfast at a table with a table cloth without smearing butter, pulling cloth off knocking over flowers, chucking silverware, and wanting to jump up and run about. He can't sit still for 20 minutes. He covers his face and cries if strange people talk to him or touch him. And all the family will be strange to him.

It will not be enjoyable for anyone and MIL will be embarrassed and upset by the slightest social faux pas.

He is just too little.

OP posts:
TrucksAndDinosaurs · 10/02/2013 15:39

Only other children are 11 and 13 boys, quite happy to behave well at adult social occasions inc meals.

OP posts:

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Arithmeticulous · 10/02/2013 15:45

How understanding is your MIL about your DS? I ask because if she's going to get professionally offended at a "sorry, that doesn't work for us" answer, then personally I'd nod and make all the right noises, then send your DH alone while you stay in your London base with your DS who will be suffering with some very inconvenient illness, what a shame.

FlouncingMintyy · 10/02/2013 15:48

Agreed, it sounds impossible. Your dh should go though.

bryonywhisker · 10/02/2013 15:51

I would't go. Apologise profusely, be honest about ds and send a nice bouquet this week.
If she takes the hump then that's her look out.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.