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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:
rainbowstardrops · 25/03/2024 11:58

I'd probably go (but that's obviously up to you) and see how it goes. If your toddler gets cranky or your DH wants to slope off then that's the perfect excuse to say he'll go and sit quietly with your child.
I would make it crystal clear though, that there will be no speeches from you and potentially no setting up, so they can forget that idea right now! You're an adult, they can't insist you do anything!

rangers80 · 25/03/2024 12:00

saraclara · 24/03/2024 18:03

To miss /stay for an hour - your parents special anniversary seems a bit much imo and a little precious of you both

That. And resenting them for not helping you when they live five hours away, is ridiculous.

Routine was important to me too, with my first, but jeeze, you don't refuse to go to (or only stay for an hour at) your parents big anniversary party, when you barely see your family already.

If you're determined not to give your toddler another try at staying up, then you tag team sitting with her, or DH does it after the first hour, while you socialise like a proper family member.

Yes maybe the child does need more socialisation, they've admitted that themselves - and its something to work on.
But why are we saying that they're precious & a special anniversary is so important, as is meeting other people, when none of them have bothered with them or their baby? Why's it fine to drag the baby 5hours away from home and distrupt its routine for an event, but the grandparents (and uncle/aunts) cant drive 5 hours to meet & see their granddaughter? And whys all the pressure on the one who doesnt live close by to give a speech & help set up etc? Its ridiculous to be honest.

Tahinii · 25/03/2024 12:01

Chitterlina · 25/03/2024 08:41

Thinking the same as others, who looks after your toddler when you’re both working full time?

Who looks after your MIL when your husband is working?

If you’ve only visited your parents once, you can’t possibly have used all your annual leave in visiting them.

Why are you tasked with writing the speech when they are apparently much closer to your sibling?

I’m not saying all this to pick holes in your story, I just think you are skewing your perception to fit your narrative - which is basically, you don’t want to go.

Agreed. I think this is six of one and half a dozen of the other.

user1492757084 · 25/03/2024 12:02

It sounds like you have petty grievances that are clouding your judgement.
It is true that your parents are not the most hands on and your sister is over busy and rude but you don't have to be anything but a kind, happy, grateful daughter.

I would go to the party. Engage a local babysitter to help you at party and to stay within coo-ee of toddler when he goes to bed. Toddler will love getting party set up.
You will have a tiring but delightful celebration.

LiveLaughCryalot · 25/03/2024 12:02

I would go so you get to catch up with family you rarely get to see but I wouldn't be doing a speech or helping set up. I would organise your time so you are out and about. Take a pram and pop little one in it when they get tired. If this doesn't work then off to bed you go.
Or don't go. You and your OH have a lot on, you may not want to leave your MIL for long by that point. Do what you want to do. They appear to think little of you so who cares what they think? You won't be missing out on anything if they kick off.

PumpkinsAndCoconuts · 25/03/2024 12:03

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.

With 70 people that can freely access this house? No way, that sounds incredibly dangerous!

Anyhow: Don´t attend if you truly don´t want to. But it would be perfectly possible to stay for more than one hour if you wanted to!

Here are two suggestions:

A.
All of you stay for the first hour. Parent A leaves and puts the LO to bed, stays there for a while. Swap after about two hours. Parent A returns to the party and parent Bstays with the child for an additional 2 hours. Result: 5 hours in total of party attendance, 3 hours for each parent.

B.
Start getting the LO used to a babysitter now and take the baby sitter with you for this party. The babysitter could stay with the LO after the child has fallen asleep.

Whereareallthemillionaires · 25/03/2024 12:03

Socialising and meeting new people is very important for children. Many small children during covid were adversely affected by isolation.

You live 5 hours away but then so do they from you and so I don’t think it’s fare to complain they haven’t visited you( inc your siblings) when you haven’t visited them either.

It doesn’t sound like you want to go tbh and are looking for excuses. A small compromise of taking turns in the evening looking after your dc isn’t much to ask I think and in fact you may find they are having fun at the party and don’t want to go to bed at their usual bedtime. Some Kids do do that.
Some kids actually enjoy parties.

I think, as others have mentioned here, there is much more to you not wanting to go than the issues ( of which there really aren’t any) of your kid. You seem to be a bit bitter with your parents and your siblings. I’d focus on dealing with that and not deprive your dc of seeing friends and relatives.

Screentrilogy · 25/03/2024 12:07

Don’t go. If the constant badgering is going to be too much then agree to all their demands but your child suddenly gets a vomiting bug the day you are supposed to leave. How unfortunate. Perhaps you and your partner also contract the vomiting bug and are unable to take phone calls

Cafog · 25/03/2024 12:11

Let your DH take her back to the house for a couple of hours.

justlonelystars · 25/03/2024 12:12

I am PFB with my PFB but in this instance, I would get the baby to sleep, stick them in a buggy where I can keep an eye and enjoy the rest of the night! We have done this a couple of times at weddings.
If your child won’t sleep in the buggy, just let the partner stay inside with them. You’ve said it’s not fair to leave them alone but watching a sleeping child isn’t a difficult job - just chill out with a book or movie in your own room and keep an eye on the monitor.
Children are very important, yes, but so are the big life events of your family. I’d suck it up for one night and enjoy some time off being a parent!

beAsensible1 · 25/03/2024 12:15

There will cousins and kids all over the party no, i think you can take it easy.

Do kids not sleep on 2 chairs pushed together anymore? one day out of routine won't be a big deal.

The resentment for your DP not helping out when they're 5 hours away is bizarre. 5 times in 1 1/2 or 2 years is fine also.

Ramalangadingdong · 25/03/2024 12:22

Ihearyousingingdownthewire · 25/03/2024 08:44

Totally.

Agree!

Bordesleyhills · 25/03/2024 12:23

I’d be similar- mine are in bed by 7 pm - I would let a sitter like my parents have them only because my parents are used to mine and mine to them but nearby with 70 people in and out and like you no way I’ll leave them .

Patrickiscrazy · 25/03/2024 12:23

If you don't feel like it, don't attend.
So many times I resorted to making stuff up, so I could be left alone and not visit a parent, relatives
(in another country).
There comes time when you just become fed up of this and when they just last far too long.
Full stop.

CoolShoeshine · 25/03/2024 12:25

Because you have already said to your parents that you can only stay an hour it is showing your negativity towards the situation. Just accept the invitation, your child may be much less clingy in a few months and enjoy the interaction with new family members. If they haven’t changed and get upset at bedtime then I’m absolutely sure everyone will appreciate your difficulty and not bat an eyelid if you disappear to take them to bed or push them around in a pushchair until they go to sleep. The only thing I wouldn’t do is leave them with a baby monitor (unless the marquee is with a few meters of the property).
You cannot pander to baby routines too much otherwise you’ll never enjoy yourself- this could be a good trial for a holiday?

Ramalangadingdong · 25/03/2024 12:25

“Your parents clearly bend over backwards to accommodate your siblings and their kids but not you and yours, yet you're the one they expect to set up, do a speech”

this doesn’t add up to me. Wouldn’t parents want a more favoured child to make the speech? Unless op has some kind of social status that they want to show off at the party.

Nazzywish · 25/03/2024 12:25

No to the baby monitor. Yes to the parent swap.

No to the speech aswell- tell a sibling to do it so you can relax sounds like you both need it.

Changeusernameseeusernamehistory · 25/03/2024 12:26

YABU attending at all. Fuck these entitled people. They don’t care about you or your child.

ChrisPriss · 25/03/2024 12:27

OP, I think that you need to ask yourself one question:
Do I want to go to this party?
If yes, then you'll find a way.
If no, then you don't go.
I understand how difficult either option will be for you, but I believe your own family's needs trump any party, and I wish you every happiness x

Lambsarehere · 25/03/2024 12:29

We would all go together. You partner should come. Just leave when your toddler is tired, even if you are there for an hour. It is great fun for toddlers to enjoy family occasions.

It is a different matter if you feel they haven't supported you at all, and have not cared enough about your life, in which case you have a full blessing not to attend. Some parents are very selfish and self absorbed, and I would not go out of my way to accommodate a five hour drive with a toddler there and back.

Mamabear487 · 25/03/2024 12:30

Wow you need to get a grip no wonder your child is so clingy. One night is not the end of the world. Stick the toddler in a pram next to you with a blanket if they are tired for an extra hour or 2 they’ll be absolutely fine. You also referred to your child as an it 🥲

Patrickiscrazy · 25/03/2024 12:33

Patrickiscrazy · 25/03/2024 12:23

If you don't feel like it, don't attend.
So many times I resorted to making stuff up, so I could be left alone and not visit a parent, relatives
(in another country).
There comes time when you just become fed up of this and when they just last far too long.
Full stop.

Sorry, edit. They were abusive.

Fupoffyagrasshole · 25/03/2024 12:34

honestly i'd just go on your own leave husband and kids behind!

Trickedbyadoughnut · 25/03/2024 12:35

Sounds like the real issue is that the rest of the family is not particularly bothered to make an effort, but you're made to feel like you need to put yourself out for them.

I suspect your child be clingy/unused to other people would be a secondary issue if the rest of the family was making you feel differently.

I wouldn't judge you for not going.

PuggyPuggyPuggy · 25/03/2024 12:38

Ugh. Parents and siblings expect you to make all the effort to maintain relationships, will do sod all to make it easier for you to attend events and still expect you to turn up for everything and play some sort of starring role doing speeches and whatnot, and by the way, dump that sprog they don't give a toss about in a bedroom of a house with a constant stream of randoms going in and out with a baby monitor, that will be fine? I wouldn't go, and I wouldn't feel bad about it either.

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