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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not go to parents wedding anniversary do

409 replies

Blueysworld123 · 24/03/2024 17:36

We live a 5 hours drive from my parents, they live in a very secluded area so the only option is to drive. We have a very young toddler who has never been left with a relative/babysitter/childminder so is very clingy to both of us. We just don’t have any help or support near us so sadly she is less exposed to new people or anyone looking after her and gets very unsettled easily. Due to circumstances we turn down wedding/social invites where we are unable to take our child or it is after their bedtime at 7pm. For context my parents have never offered to babysit, change a nappy or even help out when they see us. They have seen our child 5 times since they were born. This is largely because they are very busy with my sibling and their 3 children (first lot of grandchildren) who they moved next to when they retired, their numerous holidays and also helping my younger siblings. We absolutely love our child and spending time with them so we are happy with missing social events we would have ordinarily loved to attend and don’t feel like we are missing out. We are just at a new family stage of our lives, which is lovely given we are nearly 40 and didn’t thing we would have any children.

My parents have decided to throw a big party in the summer to celebrate their wedding anniversary. It is a nighttime do. They have made it clear that we are expected to attend. We have said that we would only be able to be there for the first hour max as it would be after our child’s bedtime and they would scream and cry because they are overtired any later. We have tried to keep them up later on special occasions but they are an absolute nightmare! Whilst not ideal timings, we are going to attend for the first hour as it would allow us to see relatives who haven’t yet met our child / we haven’t seen in a long time. Including my siblings as we are not very close (for example none of them have made any the effort to come and see my child since it was born). We really aren’t comfortable hiring a babysitter that we don’t know and feel it would be stressful for her to have a babysitter in a house she doesn’t know. She finds it hard to settle at bedtime when we anywhere other than her bedroom at home.

My parents are hiring a marquee to put in a neighbouring field to their house. They are not hiring portaloos and people will be using the toilets in the main house. They have invited 70 people. They are not very happy that we are only attending for an hour and are pushing for us to use the baby monitor and leave our child in the house on their own when they are asleep as the field is within their wider estate and therefore ‘house’ and as such we wouldn’t be leaving them alone. I am not comfortable with this approach and also think it would really be against the law to leave an infant this way? They now want me to make a speech (for context none of my other siblings ever need to make a speech at their numerous events, it is always me). If we don’t leave our child on their own they want my partner to stay in the house with our child (8pm onwards) and for me to attend the event. For context my partner cares for their disabled parent on top of working long hours and taking the bulk of the care for our child. I feel leaving them alone would be unfair. They have a huge celebration regarding life events fairly frequently and we have always attended the previous events. They have also asked that we set up the event space during the day so we would be helping them out then.

Am I being unreasonable to attend their event but only staying for the first hour?

OP posts:
Sparsely · 25/03/2024 21:13

The summer's 4 months away. Your child will do a lot of maturing in those 4 months. Just go there without a plan, just let it happen to you. Worst that will happen is she'll scream the place down and you'll be stuck in a bedroom trying to get her down for an hour or two. Not ideal but missing your parent's big event is worse and causing a family rift. You might even find she likes a party.

Epidote · 25/03/2024 21:17

You are a a long distance form your family and seems to by the tone of your post that somehow expect your family to do the same as if you were close to them.

This works both ways, if you don't want to go, because it is a long drive and you want to make a priority of your baby and little family that is fine. You can say no.
I would plan a few days holidays and take the opportunity to catch up with all the family is there and I don't see frequently. In fact that is what I do, as I live about 2000 miles from my parents and siblings.

Bringonchristmas36 · 25/03/2024 21:18

Imagine if your child one day does this to you ….

Seaside3 · 25/03/2024 21:29

If you don't want to go, say 'no, I'm sorry, we won't be attending this time.'

But you can't be mad that they don't visit you if you don't visit them. You can't be annoyed they aren't part if your child's life if you're not willing yo be part of theirs. You can't be wondering, in a few years, why your child is afraid of change or strangers, can't change their routine or adapt. Neither can you wonder why you just see each other as parents not partners any more.

Moveoverdarlin · 25/03/2024 21:36

I would go, keep the baby up as late as you can until they start getting tired, then take turns to sit with baby. Or sit in next room, maybe ask another relative to do the odd half hour here and there. But between the two of you, you can spend a lot of time at the party.

Littlemisscapable · 25/03/2024 21:40

just go with the flow and enjoy...keep child up as long as possible... it sounds like a lovely gathering of relatives/friends. Yes it's annoying that your parents don't get involved in your child's life as much but maybe this can be a starting point. Not going and using a sleep routine of a toddler will create a lot of bad feeling. You can work around it for one night.

pavedwithgoodintentions · 25/03/2024 21:47

Honestly?

I wouldn't go.

Based on all your posts, OP, I wouldn't go.

JudgeJ · 25/03/2024 21:49

Travelling 5 hours with a toddler who struggles to settle anywhere other than home is a nightmare

Maybe it's a nightmare because the child had never been allowed to experience anywhere other than home, a child who will in a short time probably not settle in nursery and/or school. Parents who are so clingy with their child are doing them no favours for the future.

bohemianmullet · 25/03/2024 22:00

"They have a huge celebration regarding life events fairly frequently and we have always attended the previous events. They have also asked that we set up the event space during the day so we would be helping them out then. "

You know, not everyone likes big social events with marquees and loads of people they don't know too well. If it was a very rare thing that's one thing. But you say they have huge celebrations frequently. It doesn't sound like you enjoy them too much. I am a big believer in not going along to thing you don't enjoy and just being honest if it's not your bag. Why should it be? If it is hugely significant that might be different. But if it's just yet another celebration of them and an excuse for a party that you wouldn't enjoy, don't go.

You seem to be focusing a lot on the other sibling/s. I'd keep it simple. You are you. Perhaps the other siblings love big parties and you don't. Maybe you just are overtired at the moment and really don't want to do a speech as you have too much on your plate and not in the mental space. Whatever it is, just say that. It can be said kindly. I would make it clear you don't actually want to though. If you keep using logistics as an excuse they will come up with loads of solutions. They need to hear you, you don't want to do a speech, thanks. You're not feeling up to public speaking at the moment. Whatever you say, don't have an excuse they can just "solve". Just say you don't want to, whilst being kind that you hope everyone else has a great time.

If it makes you feel any better OP, whilst a lot of people are saying of course you must go, I do think it all sounds rather exhausting and tiresome and a bit "look at me". I can enjoy the occasional do, as it were, but not all the time. We aren't all the same personality types and it's perhaps about time you drew some lines about what you want to do with your time. Others maybe love organising these big events, but you don't have to be so roped in.

EC22 · 25/03/2024 22:00

Tell them you wont do a speech, you’ve taken your turn. Go alone, leave toddler with dad, they don’t get to dictate what you do.
But I do think you should go.

bohemianmullet · 25/03/2024 22:06

"Imagine if your child one day does this to you …."

But so what? It doesn't mean your child doesn't love you just because they don't love huge gatherings.

I can't imagine my parents trying to force me to do public speaking against my will. I mean public speaking is the stuff of nightmares for many many people. I'd kind of hope a parent would know their offspring enough that if they really didn't enjoy these kinds of occasions they didn't keep forcing them to turn up and endure them. Plenty of people don't really like massive formal gatherings. (It can't be that informal with over 70 guests and marquees can't it?)

Ilikeadrink14 · 25/03/2024 22:10

“Our child” this, “our child” that! Very strange that you are so possessive.
This is your parents! You can’t expect them to babysit when they live 5 hours away!
Others have made sensible suggestions on how to get around this and I suggest you consider them! Your parents will never have this special anniversary again.

Mumwithbaggage · 25/03/2024 22:29

Non problem. Take child. If they fall asleep stick them in a buggy (I was done with buggies by 2 with my 4 but still used them for stuff like this) or one of you goes in the house while toddler sleeps while the other socialises. Definitely wouldn't do the baby monitor thing.

Goddessonahighway · 25/03/2024 22:32

@pavedwithgoodintentions I agree with you.

From what you've said, I just wouldn't go. Broken record technique. Good luck.

6pence · 25/03/2024 22:54

We’ll see nearer the time how child/mil is. Best not to count on us for speech/setting up, in case we can’t make it.

6pence · 25/03/2024 22:56

Or just agree to everything and then one of you be ill at the time.

Sonyaleg · 25/03/2024 23:02

Firstly, my experience of this stage was sleep was like the key to our entire level of wellbeing as a family. If DC didn’t sleep well, we didn’t because they need you when that young. So we would be tired and grumpy. They would be tired and grumpy and harder to manage so tired grumpy parents trying to manage tired and grumpy toddler equals recipe for a fucking miserable time. Mine never slept well in a strange place.

Secondly I have taken a massive dislike to your parents. They sound like self absorbed, demanding brats. I don’t care what they think or feel. But that’s obviously based on just what you have said. They might be lovely.

Thirdly, if you just don’t want to go then you can just say ‘actually, we are really struggling with time, we never get a holiday so on this occasion we will not be coming, but please do have a nice time’. Any further emotional blackmail, manipulation can be met with ‘I am sorry to hear you feel that way, we hope you have a fab time but we will not be attending’.

Or, and this is probably what I would do because I’m not as brave as my advice, say yes, of course. Go along with it all but then baby sadly comes down with a D&V bug and then you get it too and you send apologies and enjoy a quiet weekend in.

Good luck.

justasking111 · 25/03/2024 23:02

I'm confused for various reasons.

Child is clingy, how when you both work full time and child is obviously cared for somewhere.

OP and husband never go out socially, they can't leave a clingy toddler. The tail is wagging the dog here

OP is behaving like a nervous young woman around her parents when she's nearly 40.

There's such a sense of martyrdom here. Selfish narc parents, dying mother, clingy toddler. It's somewhat soap opera.

@Blueysworld123 Time to grow a pair and start living. You're not a child but a middle aged woman. Go, don't go. Child cries, she'll live.
Parents difficult, go grey.

Sonyaleg · 25/03/2024 23:08

Ilikeadrink14 · 25/03/2024 22:10

“Our child” this, “our child” that! Very strange that you are so possessive.
This is your parents! You can’t expect them to babysit when they live 5 hours away!
Others have made sensible suggestions on how to get around this and I suggest you consider them! Your parents will never have this special anniversary again.

Edited

So? I would never insist my DC attend a celebratory event or make a speech. The parents are being very demanding here. They rarely visit. Make little effort to support the OP who is going through a really tough time with a young family and a severely disabled, terminally ill MIL and works with little holiday. If I was her mother I’d be visiting regularly to help out. I certainly wouldn’t be making all these demands of her at this stage.

SillySausage53 · 25/03/2024 23:12

Routines🙄 Let the kid stay up. So what if she’s a nightmare, all kids are a lot of the time, they’re not robots. She’ll get to meet her family; she will love it. Control and routine seem important to you. You shouldn’t use her as an excuse to not do stuff. Let her have fun even if it makes your life more difficult.

PyongyangKipperbang · 25/03/2024 23:23

SillySausage53 · 25/03/2024 23:12

Routines🙄 Let the kid stay up. So what if she’s a nightmare, all kids are a lot of the time, they’re not robots. She’ll get to meet her family; she will love it. Control and routine seem important to you. You shouldn’t use her as an excuse to not do stuff. Let her have fun even if it makes your life more difficult.

How on earth do you know that she would "love it"?

I have 6 kids. 4 would (and did) absolutely love a big party, would make friends and dance. The other 2, definitely not. In the OP's scenario it would have ended up with me in a hotel room with those 2 as they simply couldnt cope with the situation and both are NT. They just dont like it. They dont like being on show or the centre of attention. DD3 (19) loves the performing arts but her ambition is to be a production director as the idea of the being "the star" is anathema to her.

Why should they be forced into a situation they dont like just so that Granny and Grandpa can pretend they have the perfect family?

@Blueysworld123 Sounds like you have been asked to make a speech and show the perfect family because you are the most biddable. The others are not so easy to control and will not present the image that they want to present.

As I said above, say no. No apologies, no reasons, no excuses. "We cant make it, hope you have a good time"....rinse and repeat. And, again another repeat, google FOG.

Teenagehorrorbag · 25/03/2024 23:30

All DCs are different but I always took my baby/toddler twins to parties and they loved it - until they crashed and burned. Then I put them in their buggy and faced it towards the wall so they had no visual stimulation, and they were often so excited and tired they slept like lambs. We did two weddings early on - when they were about 6 weeks and then 4 months, and then at their own christening at 5 months they were handed round a million guests and loved every minute!

The christening was at ours so easy to put them to bed - but the wedding at 4 months was in a church then a hotel. We stayed in the hotel. DCs were really sociable and loved all the cuddles, then fell sound asleep in their buggy. I think we got to stay until about ten and they barely knew we'd moved them upstairs (and fed them etc obvs......).

It might be a good experience for your DD to try something like this. Of course if she's upset then you'd take her indoors and one of you would stay with her - but you might be surprised how the excitement could tire her out? Maybe worth trying? But of course you know your own child better than anyone....

It would be a shame to miss a family do - I hope you get to fit it all in.

Moveoverdarlin · 25/03/2024 23:40

I assume it’s a big anniversary like their 40th, 50th or 60th? Personally I wouldn’t miss it for the world, in ten years time one or both of them might not be here, you’ll look back on photos and think ‘oh look how little DD was then!’ You certainly won’t think ‘I’m glad we didn’t go to that party so DD had a good nights sleep on June 29th 2024.’ It’s your Mum and Dad!

PyongyangKipperbang · 25/03/2024 23:45

I cant help thinking that everyone saying "But its your parents!!!" have emotionally healthy relationships with their parents. Its clear that the OP doesnt have that.

Those of us saying "SAY NO" understand how it can be when things are less than wonderful, when you are the "Oh X will do it" kid, because you are the biddable one who never says no thanks to fear obligation and guilt.

There is a reason they want to the OP to make the speech and not one of her siblings.....