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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Relocated for parents and they are MIA.

167 replies

Hereformysanity · 19/07/2024 15:06

Hi Mumsnet, I'm new to this so I'm very sorry in advance if I haven't got the lingo right! Hopefully it makes sense.

So long story short. 5 years ago my DH and I relocated to be closer to my parents after having our DD after they guilty tripped us about being too far away for them to spend time with her and get to know her. We were 2 hours away. We were looking to move anyway but had quite an open net just needed to be near to wither London or Manchester for work (we both work in corporate jobs which my mum in particular is very dismissive of as not a real job as you are just sat all day) but we were persuaded by my parents and in hindsight their passive aggressive attitude about us wanting to live elsewhere they were vocal and I quote 'it would be very selfish of us and stupid to give up grandparent help) but admittedly we liked the idea of grandparent help occasionally and didn't have in laws as they are overseas so any help was great.

So with that we moved closer to parents and brother and sister. 20 minutes away. My brother doesn't have kids but my sister has kids same age as mine and they live ten minutes closer to my parents.

Fast forward five years we now have DD and DS. I struggled with getting used to two DH was away a lot with work and I felt very alone and overwhelmed both kids at home. We have had very little help during the five years we have been here from my parents as they are 'too busy'. My parents both work part time to pay for a house that is big and empty and falling to pieces because they are too proud to downsize. I'm sure somewhere on here there will be a thread from my siblings about this matter as it's a real pain to see them moaning and moaning about still working to pay off their mortgage and do up their home when downsizing would be a very easy solution and would leave them much happier. We have concluded they like the stress and having something to moan about.

Anyway due to my parents working they have never once in 5 years offered childcare not a zip. When we moved I enrolled my DD in nursery 4 full days a week as parents never even offered as much as a morning once a week even bought I asked but took great pleasure in telling me how awful it is that I'm putting my child in nursery for someone else to raise.

I love my.job but more than that I have bills to pay but my DM in particular thinks it's selfish of me to work when I have children. (She only started working when my sister was 10 and had been a SAHM to that point with lots of grandparent help) My DD is now in school and has 3 days of after school clubs and DS in nursery 4 days as I have no other options and all I ever hear is tutting and "oh bless them, poor kids, I can't believe you just put them in and leave them all day like that". It's so hard not to lose my mind.

I would love my parents to do a pick up and take them home for tea or have my DS for just a morning to 'get to know him' but they have no interest in offering despite me saying how much I would love that. To add insult to injury they do this for my sister!

It's fine I'm managing it's just I have a lot of resentment that for the sake of keeping the status quo and everyone being pleasant I'm bottling it and it's causing me to harbour resentment which is not healthy and it's bloody hard seeing all these fab grandparents at the school gates or hearing friends talk about how lovely it is there parents have their children a few days a week or some even taking them on holidays!!!!!

The 6 weeks are here and I've had to arrange private childcare all the way apart from 10.days where between DH and myself we've managed to get some A/L to cover but we both work in teams of parents so everyone wants time off and simply you don't always get it. Despite me explaining this to my parents and saying how much it would be really helpful to get help to only have them say oh sorry we are working or are just we are busy but then go on to criticise what I have had to do!!!!! Raaaa
I feel like it comes from a place of bitterness that I lived away for ten years and then came back need help but they withhold as a bit of a ha you can't just come here and now have our help (despite that being exactly what they had said when we were looking at moving).

I just feel completely bashed. I work hard as we all do to give our kids the best start and pay for life which isn't cheap and to have been what felt like guilt tripping and huge promises about getting to know grandkids to get us here but now we are here I can count on one hand, in five years, how often my parents, who are ten miles away, have had the kids without me or husband present. On two hands I can count this and the times they have babysat for us for anniversary's but only once the kids are fast asleep will they come and sit in the house for us so they don't even see the kids. My kids are really easy going too thank god so it's not like they can't cope, my parents are young and active. Am I wrong to expect a bit more and to be sad that there's clearly favouritism towards my sister or just total disregard and possibly a little pleasure in seeing me try and have it all?

Whilst where we live is nice it's not where we would be for any other reason than family, I just feel like my parents made empty promises and they love to paint this image that they are really hands on with all grandkids and it's simply not true and they would not react at all well if I said any of this to them so I haven't forgotten the same of keeping the peace.

Sorry for the whingefest!

OP posts:
ssd · 21/07/2024 12:36

I'd move.

Far far away.

TonsleyHouse3 · 21/07/2024 15:40

I am so sorry to hear this.

This is their personality types and they are never going to change, they are enjoying writing this drama scripts for their lives.

Breathe, relax, try and laugh about it privately to relieve your stress and know, absolutely, 100% none of this is your fault.

Just them being them, the way they were born to be, the way of the world and nothing more.

Take care of you, take care of your nearest and dearest and don't take on board internalise what they say and do.

Good luck, be happy, don't give them their win.

LaughingElderberry · 21/07/2024 15:51

Themaghag · 21/07/2024 03:41

Well, ptobably best not to comment until you have then, as your response makes no sense!

You might have missed it, but she'd already responded to a previous poster and amended her view. In the spirit of your point about reading before you comment 😊

Sueskatflap · 21/07/2024 16:30

I can't believe your parents/mother had a personality transplant as soon as you moved. To be honest your mum sounds judgemental and a bit of a bully so was she always like this? Knowing your parents were wrestling with a large house that needs doing up and with both still working. did you really move and believe you were going to get some free childcare and/or your kids perhaps taken away on holiday as you describe the experience of others? With all that and other grandchildren being cared for didn't you think about how they were going to fit it in? Didn't you question it before the upheaval of a move for your family That said your parents are adults and can make their own choices which includes staying in a big house and choosing whether or not to offer babysitting/childcare to one member of the family and not the other. It may be unfair and you may not like it but that's how it is. No matter how well behaved grandchildren are once you start to get a bit older you slow up and everything is just that but more of a chore....even grandchildren no matter how much their grandparents love them. You can choose to have children but they are your responsibility not your parents'. I don't expect this to be a popular point of view but grandparents are not the free childcare option so many seem to assume they are. Great if it suits all parties including grandchildren but if not....grow up wise up and live your life according to the reality you have....hankering after what isn't going to happen will just pull you further down..put yourself to sorting this out in your head and reality and move on. It's your family's future so make sure you don't get mired in bitterness and perhaps end up like your mum. I'm sure you can do it!

Themaghag · 21/07/2024 16:37

LaughingElderberry · 21/07/2024 15:51

You might have missed it, but she'd already responded to a previous poster and amended her view. In the spirit of your point about reading before you comment 😊

I don't always wade through every response, particularly if there are loads, as frankly, life is too short, but I always think it is worth reading the Opening Poster's first post in full and any subsequent ones before commenting. If nothing else it would save an awful lot of misunderstandings!

LaughingElderberry · 21/07/2024 16:53

Themaghag · 21/07/2024 16:37

I don't always wade through every response, particularly if there are loads, as frankly, life is too short, but I always think it is worth reading the Opening Poster's first post in full and any subsequent ones before commenting. If nothing else it would save an awful lot of misunderstandings!

I agree. But she'd already acknowledged yesterday that she hadn't read the full OP. So your comment about reading before commenting struck me as being slightly ironic 🤷‍♀️

148Gh · 24/07/2024 10:59

Createausername1970 · 19/07/2024 15:28

The next time DM starts with the "poor babies" malarky, then just say

"is that an offer of help mum? No? Then as there is no alternative please don't keep going on about it"

Or

"Is that an offer of help mum? No, because you need to work to pay for your house? So do I - so what's your suggestion?"

This!

move away OP

WildfirePonie · 24/07/2024 12:04

Similar story here, I live 5 minutes from my parents but then they would hint constantly about babysitting and not being up to it, and yet they babysit my DB Golden Balls kids ALL THE TIME! And he lives a 2 hour drive away, they even meet him halfway so he doesn't have that long of a drive. Also, our kids are the same age, so it's not like his are easier, they are just by default the favourite!

I went NC about 4 years ago. I just had enough of the blatant favoritism over the years.

I also think they wanted me nearer to provide care when they are older. I refuse to help, DB can do it all as he is the fav.

Shadylady52 · 25/07/2024 16:15

Your not alone. Just tell her you don't want to disguss your childcare arrangements. She's not looking after them. Also your sister can look after their needs when older. Guess what your sister won't do it and she will guilt trip you. Put your foot down now.

yaddayaddayah · 25/07/2024 22:32

We have similar. My parents moved 2 hours away from where they’d spent most of their lives, to be nearer me and their grandchildren (yet still managed to be 30 mins in the wrong direction!!). We never asked them to. Didn’t particularly need or want them closer. They barely help. They think they do and make a big show to any mug that will listen about how they upped their lives and relocated to be nearer to us and how busy they are with the grandchildren, but they do nothing mostly. Both retired for several years after taking early retirement. V financially comfortable and are a help with that often, but next to zero help with any childcare. It’s infuriating. I’m at a point of pretty low contact.
oh and yes, my brother is golden balls. No kids. He moved 30ish mins further away from them a few years ago through literal choice (we had no choice, work brought us here).
im now NC with him

GirlsAndPenguins · 26/07/2024 09:13

You need to have it out with them!
5 years of resentment is a heavy weight to carry around.
No more dropping hints. Be direct and ask them…
Can you have children a day a week in the holidays?
Is there a reason that you’re able to have sisters kids and not mine?
You do realise you said you would help if we moved closer? I would really appreciate some more help.
I don’t think this will be resolved if you don’t open up and I think your resentment for them will grow

Sharptonguedwoman · 26/07/2024 13:53

Skybluepinky · 20/07/2024 20:18

Yr kids u can’t expect others to look after them, u could always use a childminder rather than a nursery.

Read the original message about what the grandparents said.

Sharptonguedwoman · 26/07/2024 13:55

Maddy70 · 21/07/2024 04:28

Honestly this.... they have made a choice to work to maintain their house.

They are working they aren't available

You live 20 mins away. Thats 40 min minimum for a pick up

They didn't promise you childcare....

You sound really resentful anx entitled of a situation you have made up in your head.

Read the original message?

Spicastar · 28/07/2024 01:56

I'm sorry you've had this experience. Something similar happened to me when both grandmas were super keen to have grandchildren, but after we had DS neither have been hands on at all: my mum because of legit health problems, my MIL seems to love the idea of being grandma more than the actual reality. However.

It's time for you to plan your life without any input from your parents. Where do you truly want to live? Will you get more help elsewhere? Can you lean on to your sister, other siblings or in-laws more? Or cousins, good friends...? We live overseas far from all relatives and have had to find a village: a couple other neighbourhood families to tag team with help.

Your parents will not change. They'll whinge forever because it gives them some surge of power. It's oh so lovely to be a victim/martyr/too busy, instead of changing anything. You just need to learn to ignore their guilt tripping. Maybe limit contact? Yes they'll whinge more but what's the actual harm in that? It's just noise even if it feels extremely unfair. You can never please them, or get them onside, because they've subconsciously decided they like life just as it is now.

Focus on what you can do to make your situation better, then follow through, completely regardless of your parents' opinions.

Oblomov24 · 28/07/2024 05:32

Then Move. Wherever you want. I'd always encourage anyone to move in plenty of time for a good primary school, but more importantly thinking ahead for a good secondary. All our friends told us the local schools (all good), one was a feeder to a very good / excellent secondary. I was happy with that. Tell your parents you are doing it now for the best schools.

jrc1071 · 29/07/2024 15:41

Sounds like your parents did a bait and switch. They suck. Maybe they are jealous of your relationship and family and felt the need to control things by boo hooing and whining to get you to move (which obvs made your life more difficult) as a one up. I do not know. Am not in the relationship.

However as it is clear they do not want to help, be active grandparents-- you need to let this go. Either book the childcare, or move somewhere where it makes yours and your DH life easier to manage the family.

Goodtogossip · 30/07/2024 14:43

If it's not an area you would've considered moving to had it not have been for your parents promising to help out then why not consider moving to another area that suits you & your family better? If your Parents say anything tell them you moved to be closer to them but it's not what you envisaged & so you're now putting your own needs/wants first this time.

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